Understudied Proteins and Understudied Functions in the Model Bacterium
Bacillus subtilis -- a Major Challenge in Current Research
Abstract
Model organisms such as the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus
subtilis have been studied intensively for decades. However, even for
such model organisms no function has been identified for about one
fourth of all proteins. It has recently been realized that such
understudied proteins as well as poorly studied functions set a
limitation to our understanding of the requirements for cellular life,
and the Understudied Proteins Initiative has been launched. Obviously,
poorly studied proteins that are strongly expressed, are likely to be
most important to the cell and should therefore have priority in further
studies. Since the functional analysis of unknown proteins can be
extremely laborious, a minimal knowledge is required prior to targeted
functional studies. In this review, we discuss strategies to obtain such
a minimal annotation, e.g. from global interaction, expression or
localization studies. We present a set of 41 highly expressed and poorly
studied proteins of B. subtilis. Several of these proteins are
thought or known to bind RNA and/or the ribosome, some may may control
the metabolism of B. subtilis, and another subset of particularly
small proteins may act as regulatory elements to control the expression
of downstream genes. Moreover, we discuss the challenges of poorly
studied functions with a focus on RNA-binding proteins, amino acid
transport and the control of metabolic homeostasis. The identification
of the functions of the selected proteins will strongly advance our
knowledge on B. subtilis, but also on other organisms since many
of the proteins are conserved in many groups of bacteria.