The ever increasing necessity of mass spectrometry in dissecting protein
post-translational modifications catalyzed by bacterial effectors
Abstract
Protein post-translational modifications (PTMs), such as
ADP-ribosylation and phosphorylation, regulate multiple fundamental
biological processes in cells. During bacterial infection, effector
proteins are delivered into host cells through dedicated bacterial
secretion systems and can modulate important cellular pathways by
covalently modifying their host targets. These strategies enable
intruding bacteria to subvert various host processes, thereby promoting
their own survival and proliferation. Despite rapid expansion of our
understanding of effector-mediated PTMs in host cells, analytical
measurements of these molecular events still pose significant challenges
in the study of host-pathogen interactions. Nevertheless, with major
technical breakthroughs in the last two decades, mass spectrometry (MS)
has evolved to be a valuable tool for detecting protein PTMs and mapping
modification sites. Additionally, large-scale PTM profiling, facilitated
by different enrichment strategies prior to MS analysis, allows
high-throughput screening of host enzymatic substrates of bacterial
effectors. In this review, we summarize the advances in the studies of
two representative PTMs (i.e., ADP-ribosylation and phosphorylation)
catalyzed by bacterial effectors during infection. Importantly, we will
discuss the ever increasing role of MS in understanding these molecular
events and how the latest MS-based tools can aid in future studies of
this booming area of pathogenic bacteria-host interactions.