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      Proteome analysis of Spiroplasma melliferum (A56) and protein characterisation across species boundaries.

      1 , ,
      Electrophoresis
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Spiroplasma melliferum (Class: Mollicutes) is a wall-less, helical bacterium with a genome of approximately 1460 kbp encoding 800-1000 gene-products. A two-dimensional electrophoresis gel reference map of S. melliferum was produced by Phoretix 2-D gel software analysis of eight high quality gels. The reference map showed 456 silver-stained and replicated protein spots. 156 proteins (34% of visible protein spots) from S. melliferum were further characterised by one, or a combination, of the following: amino acid analysis, peptide-mass fingerprinting via matrix assisted laser desorption ionisation-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry, and N-terminal protein microsequencing. Proteins with close relationship to those previously determined from other species were identified across species barriers. Thus, this study represents the first larger-scale analysis of a proteome based upon the attribution of predominantly 'unique numerical parameters' for protein characterisation across species boundaries, as opposed to a sequence-based approach. This approach allowed all database entries to be screened for homology, as is currently the case for studies based on nucleic acid or protein sequence information. Several proteins studied from this organism were identified as hypothetical, or having no close homolog already present in the databases. Gene-products from major families such as glycolysis, translation, transcription, cellular processes, energy metabolism and protein synthesis were identified. Several gene-products characterised in S. melliferum were not previously found in studies of the entire Mycoplasma genitalium and Mycoplasma pneumoniae (both closely related Mollicutes) genomes. The presence of such gene-products in S. melliferum is discussed in terms of genome size as compared with the smallest known free-living organisms. Finally, the levels of expression of S. melliferum gene-products were determined with respect to total optical intensity associated with all visible proteins expressed in exponentially grown cells.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Electrophoresis
          Electrophoresis
          Wiley
          0173-0835
          0173-0835
          Aug 1997
          : 18
          : 8
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Centre of Proteome Research and Gene-Product Mapping, National Innovation Centre, Eveleigh, Australia.
          Article
          10.1002/elps.1150180809
          9298648
          0643147a-6ebf-424b-848a-f194c18644fc
          History

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