Genomic studies of bacteria have long pointed toward widespread prevalence of small open reading frames (sORFs) encoding for short proteins, <100 amino acids in length. Despite the mounting genomic evidence of their robust expression, relatively little progress has been made in their mass spectrometry-based detection and various blanket statements have been used to explain this observed discrepancy. In this study, we provide a large-scale riboproteogenomics investigation of the challenging nature of proteomic detection of such small proteins as informed by conditional translation data. A panel of physiochemical properties alongside recently developed mass spectrometry detectability metrics was interrogated to provide a comprehensive evidence-based assessment of sORF-encoded polypeptide (SEP) detectability. Moreover, a large-scale proteomics and translatomics compendium of proteins produced by Typhimurium (. Typhimurium), a model human pathogen, across a panel of growth conditions is presented and used in support of our SEP detectability analysis. This integrative approach is used to provide a data-driven census of small proteins expressed by . Typhimurium across growth phases and infection-relevant conditions. Taken together, our study pinpoints current limitations in proteomics-based detection of novel small proteins currently missing from bacterial genome annotations.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10117744 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/femsml/uqac005 | DOI Listing |
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