Increasing taxonomic and functional characterization of host-microbiome interactions by DIA-PASEF metaproteomics

Front Microbiol. 2023 Oct 16:14:1258703. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2023.1258703. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Introduction: Metaproteomics is a rapidly advancing field that offers unique insights into the taxonomic composition and the functional activity of microbial communities, and their effects on host physiology. Classically, data-dependent acquisition (DDA) mass spectrometry (MS) has been applied for peptide identification and quantification in metaproteomics. However, DDA-MS exhibits well-known limitations in terms of depth, sensitivity, and reproducibility. Consequently, methodological improvements are required to better characterize the protein landscape of microbiomes and their interactions with the host.

Methods: We present an optimized proteomic workflow that utilizes the information captured by Parallel Accumulation-Serial Fragmentation (PASEF) MS for comprehensive metaproteomic studies in complex fecal samples of mice.

Results and discussion: We show that implementing PASEF using a DDA acquisition scheme (DDA-PASEF) increased peptide quantification up to 5 times and reached higher accuracy and reproducibility compared to previously published classical DDA and data-independent acquisition (DIA) methods. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the combination of DIA, PASEF, and neuronal-network-based data analysis, was superior to DDA-PASEF in all mentioned parameters. Importantly, DIA-PASEF expanded the dynamic range towards low-abundant proteins and it doubled the quantification of proteins with unknown or uncharacterized functions. Compared to previous classical DDA metaproteomic studies, DIA-PASEF resulted in the quantification of up to 4 times more taxonomic units using 16 times less injected peptides and 4 times shorter chromatography gradients. Moreover, 131 additional functional pathways distributed across more and even uniquely identified taxa were profiled as revealed by a peptide-centric taxonomic-functional analysis. We tested our workflow on a validated preclinical mouse model of neuropathic pain to assess longitudinal changes in host-gut microbiome interactions associated with pain - an unexplored topic for metaproteomics. We uncovered the significant enrichment of two bacterial classes upon pain, and, in addition, the upregulation of metabolic activities previously linked to chronic pain as well as various hitherto unknown ones. Furthermore, our data revealed pain-associated dynamics of proteome complexes implicated in the crosstalk between the host immune system and the gut microbiome. In conclusion, the DIA-PASEF metaproteomic workflow presented here provides a stepping stone towards a deeper understanding of microbial ecosystems across the breadth of biomedical and biotechnological fields.

Keywords: chronic neuropathic pain; data-independent acquisition; host-microbiome interactions; metaproteomics; mouse gut microbiome; parallel accumulation-serial fragmentation.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work is funded by a Research grant from the FWF (P35856-B to MS) and the University of Vienna.