pr500107p_si_002.xlsx (384.47 kB)
Staphylococcus aureus Surface Proteins Involved in Adaptation to Oxacillin Identified Using a Novel Cell Shaving Approach
dataset
posted on 2014-06-06, 00:00 authored by Nestor Solis, Benjamin
L. Parker, Stephen M. Kwong, Gareth Robinson, Neville Firth, Stuart J. CordwellStaphylococcus aureus is a Gram-positive
pathogen responsible for a variety of infections, and some strains
are resistant to virtually all classes of antibiotics. Cell shaving
proteomics using a novel probability scoring algorithm to compare
the surfaceomes of the methicillin-resistant, laboratory-adapted S. aureus COL strain with a COL strain in vitro adapted
to high levels of oxacillin (APT). APT displayed altered cell morphology
compared with COL and increased aggregation in biofilm assays. Increased
resistance to β-lactam antibiotics was observed, but adaptation
to oxacillin did not confer multidrug resistance. Analysis of the S. aureus COL and APT surfaceomes identified 150
proteins at a threshold determined by the scoring algorithm. Proteins
unique to APT included the LytR-CpsA-Psr (LCP) domain-containing MsrR
and SACOL2302. Quantitative RT-PCR showed increased expression of sacol2302 in APT grown with oxacillin (>6-fold compared
with COL). Overexpression of sacol2302 in COL to
levels consistent with APT (+ oxacillin) did not influence biofilm
formation or β-lactam resistance. Proteomics using iTRAQ and
LC–MS/MS identified 1323 proteins (∼50% of the theoretical S. aureus proteome), and cluster analysis demonstrated
elevated APT abundances of LCP proteins, capsule and peptidoglycan
biosynthesis proteins, and proteins involved in wall remodelling.
Adaptation to oxacillin also induced urease proteins, which maintained
culture pH compared to COL. These results show that S. aureus modifies surface architecture in response
to antibiotic adaptation.