Publication | Closed Access
Proteogenomic Discovery of a Small, Novel Protein in Yeast Reveals a Strategy for the Detection of Unannotated Short Open Reading Frames
26
Citations
54
References
2015
Year
Proteogenomic DiscoveryEngineeringGeneticsGenome AnnotationMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsGenomicsProteomic DataProteomic TechnologyTranscriptional RegulationComputational GenomicsYeastMolecular DiagnosticsProteomicsOmicsTranslational ProteomicsBioinformaticsFunctional GenomicsProtein BioinformaticsNovel ProteinGene Sequence AnnotationComputational BiologyMass SpectrometryYeast RevealsSystems BiologyMedicine
In recent years, proteomic data have contributed to genome annotation efforts, most notably in humans and mice, and spawned a field termed "proteogenomics". Yeast, in contrast with higher eukaryotes, has a small genome, which has lent itself to simpler ORF prediction. Despite this, continual advances in mass spectrometry suggest that proteomics should be able to improve genome annotation even in this well-characterized species. Here we applied a proteogenomics workflow to yeast to identify novel protein-coding genes. Specific databases were generated, from intergenic regions of the genome, which were then queried with MS/MS data. This suggested the existence of several putative novel ORFs of <100 codons, one of which we chose to validate. Synthetic peptides, RNA-Seq analysis, and evidence of evolutionary conservation allowed for the unequivocal definition of a new protein of 78 amino acids encoded on chromosome X, which we dub YJR107C-A. It encodes a new type of domain, which ab initio modeling suggests as predominantly α-helical. We show that this gene is nonessential for growth; however, deletion increases sensitivity to osmotic stress. Finally, from the above discovery process, we discuss a generalizable strategy for the identification of short ORFs and small proteins, many of which are likely to be undiscovered.
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