Profiling the Heme-Binding Proteomes of Bacteria Using Chemical Proteomics

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Abstract

Heme is a cofactor with myriad roles and essential to almost all living organisms. Beyond classical gas transport and catalytic functions, heme is increasingly appreciated as a tightly controlled signalling molecule regulating protein expression. However, heme acquisition, biosynthesis and regulation is poorly understood beyond a few model organisms, and the heme-binding proteome has not been fully characterised in bacteria. Yet as heme homeostasis is critical for bacterial survival, heme-binding proteins are promising drug targets. Herein we report a chemical proteomics method for global profiling of heme-binding proteins in live cells for the first time. Employing a panel of heme-based clickable and photoaffinity probes enabled the profiling of 32–54 % of the known heme-binding proteomes in Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. This simple-to-implement profiling strategy could be interchangeably applied to different cell types and systems and fuel future research into heme biology.

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Wilkinson, I. V. L., Bottlinger, M., El Harraoui, Y., & Sieber, S. A. (2023). Profiling the Heme-Binding Proteomes of Bacteria Using Chemical Proteomics. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 62(9). https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202212111

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