About this Research Topic
Traditionally it was believed that large networks of PTMs exist only in complex eukaryal cells, which exploit them for coordination and fine-tuning of various cellular functions. PTMs have also been detected in bacteria, but the early examples focused on a few important regulatory events, based mainly on protein phosphorylation. The global importance (and abundance) of PTMs in bacterial physiology was systematically underestimated. In recent years, global studies have reported large datasets of phosphorylated, acetylated and glycosylated proteins in bacteria. Other modifications of bacterial proteins have been recently described: pupylation, methylation, sirtuin acetylation, lipidation, carboxylation and bacillithiolation. As the landscape of PTMs in bacterial cells is rapidly expanding, primarily due to advances of detection methods in mass spectrometry, our research field is adapting to comprehend the potential impact of these modifications on the cellular physiology. The field of protein phosphorylation, especially of the Ser/Thr/Tyr type, has been profoundly transformed. We have become aware that bacterial kinases phosphorylate many protein substrates and thus constitute regulatory nodes with potential for signal integration. They also engage in cross-talk and eukaryal-like mutual activation cascades. The regulatory potential of protein acetylation and glycosylation in bacteria is also rapidly emerging, and the cross-talk between acetylation and phosphorylation has been documented.
This topic will deal with the complexity of the PTM landscape in bacteria, and focus in particular on the physiological roles that PTMs play and methods to study them. The PTMs we propose to cover include, but are not limited to: phosphorylation on histidine/aspartate by the two-component systems, phosphorylation catalyzed by serine/threonine and tyrosine kinases, histidine and cysteine phosphorylation by the PEP-phosphotransferase systems, glycosylation, acetylation (including that of sirtuins), pupylation, methylation, lipidation, carboxylation, bacillithiolation and targeted degradation of bacterial proteins. The topic will be associated to the 1st International Conference on Post-Translational Modifications in Bacteria (September 9-10, 2014, Göttingen, Germany), and conference participants will be encouraged to contribute reviews or original research papers related to topics of their presentations.
We hope that the topic will become a focal point for discussion among researchers working on different bacterial PTMs. We would encourage them to interact, much in the same way as their respective “favorite” PTMs interact in vivo.
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