Document detail
ID

doi:10.1186/s12866-024-03348-8...

Author
Dreyer, Annika Masanta, Wycliffe O. Lugert, Raimond Bohne, Wolfgang Groß, Uwe Leha, Andreas Dakna, Mohammed Lenz, Christof Zautner, Andreas E.
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

Mycology

Year

2024

listing date

6/5/2024

Keywords
... temperature changes proteome mass spectrometry dia-ms 24 h up-regulation dna biosynthesis proteins 42 °c temperature incubation jejuni 37 °c
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Abstract

Background The main natural reservoir for Campylobacter jejuni is the avian intestinal tract.

There, C. jejuni multiplies optimally at 42 °C – the avian body temperature.

After infecting humans through oral intake, the bacterium encounters the lower temperature of 37 °C in the human intestinal tract.

Proteome profiling by label-free mass spectrometry (DIA-MS) was performed to examine the processes which enable C. jejuni 81–176 to thrive at 37 °C in comparison to 42 °C.

In total, four states were compared with each other: incubation for 12 h at 37 °C, for 24 h at 37 °C, for 12 h at 42 °C and 24 h at 42 °C.

Results It was shown that the proteomic changes not only according to the different incubation temperature but also to the length of the incubation period were evident when comparing 37 °C and 42 °C as well as 12 h and 24 h of incubation.

Altogether, the expression of 957 proteins was quantifiable.

37.1 − 47.3% of the proteins analyzed showed significant differential regulation, with at least a 1.5-fold change in either direction (i.e. log_2 FC ≥ 0.585 or log_2 FC ≤ -0.585) and an FDR-adjusted p -value of less than 0.05.

The significantly differentially expressed proteins could be arranged in 4 different clusters and 16 functional categories.

Conclusions The C. jejuni proteome at 42 °C is better adapted to high replication rates than that at 37 °C, which was in particular indicated by the up-regulation of proteins belonging to the functional categories “replication” (e.g. Obg, ParABS, and NapL), “DNA synthesis and repair factors” (e.g. DNA-polymerase III, DnaB, and DnaE), “lipid and carbohydrate biosynthesis” (e.g. capsular biosynthesis sugar kinase, PrsA, AccA, and AccP) and “vitamin synthesis, metabolism, cofactor biosynthesis” (e.g. MobB, BioA, and ThiE).

The relative up-regulation of proteins with chaperone function (GroL, DnaK, ClpB, HslU, GroS, DnaJ, DnaJ-1, and NapD) at 37 °C in comparison to 42 °C after 12 h incubation indicates a temporary lower-temperature proteomic response.

Additionally the up-regulation of factors for DNA uptake (ComEA and RecA) at 37 °C compared to 42 °C indicate a higher competence for the acquisition of extraneous DNA at human body temperature.

Dreyer, Annika,Masanta, Wycliffe O.,Lugert, Raimond,Bohne, Wolfgang,Groß, Uwe,Leha, Andreas,Dakna, Mohammed,Lenz, Christof,Zautner, Andreas E., 2024, Proteome profiling of Campylobacter jejuni 81–176 at 37 °C and 42 °C by label-free mass spectrometry, BioMed Central

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