Over the last 10 years, DNA sequences of more than 600 bacterial species have been deposited in databases and are now available to search any gene, motif, or regulatory sequence of interest. Although genome data are instrumental in phylogenetic analysis and in silico design of metabolic and regulatory networks, only a very small fraction of the information has been experimentally validated. A striking example is lipoproteins predicted from genome sequences. Despite the predominance of this class of surface proteins in bacteria (up to 0.5 to 8% of the proteome), very few of these proteins have been identified as lipoproteins by biochemical methods (19). In this issue of the Journal of Bacteriology, Baumgärtner et al. (2) report a systematic... |