November 3, 2006
Journal Article

Biomarker Candidate Identification in Yersinia Pestis Using Organism-Wide Semiquantitative Proteomics

Abstract

Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, is listed by the CDC as a level A select pathogen. To better enable detection, intervention and treatment of Y. pestis infections, it is necessary to understand its protein expression under conditions that promote or inhibit virulence. To this end, we have utilized a novel combination of the accurate mass and time tag methodology of mass spectrometry and clustering analysis using OmniViz™ to compare the protein abundance changes of 992 identified proteins under four growth conditions. Temperature and Ca2+ concentration were used to trigger virulence associated protein expression fundamental to the low calcium response. High-resolution liquid chromatography and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry were utilized to determine protein identity and abundance on the genome-wide level. The cluster analyses revealed, in a rapid visual platform, the reproducibility of the current method as well as relevant protein abundance changes of expected and novel proteins relating to a specific growth condition and sub-cellular location. Using this method, 89 proteins were identified as having a similar abundance change profile to 29 known virulence associated proteins, providing additional biomarker candidates for future detection and vaccine development strategies.

Revised: October 16, 2008 | Published: November 3, 2006

Citation

Hixson K.K., J.N. Adkins, S.E. Baker, R.J. Moore, R.D. Smith, S.L. McCutchen-Maloney, and M.S. Lipton. 2006. Biomarker Candidate Identification in Yersinia Pestis Using Organism-Wide Semiquantitative Proteomics. Journal of Proteome Research 5, no. 11:3008-3017. PNNL-SA-49565.