The opportunistic pathogen Staphylococcus aureus has become a major threat for human health and well-being by developing resistance to antibiotics and by fast evolution into new lineages that rapidly spread within the healthy human population. This calls for development of active or passive immunization strategies to prevent or treat acute phase infections. Since no such anti-staphylococcal immunization approaches are available for clinical implementation, the present studies were aimed at identifying new leads for their development. For this purpose, we profiled the cell-surface-exposed staphylococcal proteome under infection-mimicking conditions by combining two approaches for "bacterial shaving" with immobilized or soluble trypsin and su...