Discovery
of Species-Specific Proteotypic Peptides
To Establish a Spectral Library Platform for Identification of Nontuberculosis
Mycobacteria from Mass Spectrometry-Based Proteomics
Nontuberculous mycobacteria are opportunistic bacteria
pulmonary
and extra-pulmonary infections in humans that closely resemble Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Although genome sequencing
strategies helped determine NTMs, a common assay for the detection
of coinfection by multiple NTMs with M. tuberculosis in the primary attempt of diagnosis is still elusive. Such a lack
of efficiency leads to delayed therapy, an inappropriate choice of
drugs, drug resistance, disease complications, morbidity, and mortality.
Although a high-resolution LC–MS/MS-based multiprotein panel
assay can be developed due to its specificity and sensitivity, it
needs a library of species-specific peptides as a platform. Toward
this, we performed an analysis of proteomes of 9 NTM species with
more than 20 million peptide spectrum matches gathered from 26 proteome
data sets. Our metaproteomic analyses determined 48,172 species-specific
proteotypic peptides across 9 NTMs. Notably, M. smegmatis (26,008), M. abscessus (12,442), M. vaccae (6487), M. fortuitum (1623), M. avium subsp. <i>paratuberculosis</i> (844), M. avium subsp. <i>hominissuis</i> (580), and M. marinum (112) displayed
>100 species-specific proteotypic peptides. Finally, these peptides
and corresponding spectra have been compiled into a spectral library,
FASTA, and JSON formats for future reference and validation in clinical
cohorts by the biomedical community for further translation.