Despite the fact that bacteria have little genomes (1,500 protein coding regions for the tiny ones and 6,000 for the big complex ones like Pseudomonas?) not even all of the model bacteria have been explored really in depth by proteomics.
This study goes a whole lot of different directions with some great findings pretty much every way the authors point it.
The data from bacteria were acquired on a nanoflow Orbitrap Eclipse and a microflow Exploris (50uL/min @90min). There is a helpful table that tells you which experiments were performed on what and when. The authors also do classical 16s rRNA sequencing stuff on dairy products infected with unknown bacteria and acquire a bunch of data, including proteomics of over 300 bacterial species with data dependent analysis.
MS2Bac is the software and, suprisingly, it leans on spectral counts as a proxy for quantification. For younger people, spectral counts relies on the fact that the number of peptide spectral matches for each protein is an indirect function of that protein's relative abundance. Imagine bacteria A has 5,000 copies of EtfA protein and bacteria B has 100,000 copies. When you do label free proteomics of both, the bacteria B will probably have both higher sequence coverage of EtfA and a higher number of repeated fragmentation of the EtfA peptides. We used to do this because we didn't know how to do direct quantification. The spectral counting approach is also generally handicapped on high resolution instruments like the ones used here because an Orbitrap is smart enough to recognize that the +2 and +3 verions of peptide X are the same thing and will only fragment the most abundant ones, reducing the proxy for linear dynamic range of spectral counting techniques. Given the fact that there is a 150 Hz ion trap on the market right now, I suspect that we'll see more spectral counting.
I don't think many microbiologists will be surprised to know that you can tell bacteria apart pretty darned well by LCMS. You can put colonies of bacteria on a plate and hit them with some MALDI pulses and the spectra coming off is a decent enough signature that you can choose the next clinical intervention. There is a big difference between that and a tryptic digestion, however, and this is a bunch of bacteria that look different even when they are closely related. If you are a microbiologist, I don't think you'd be sad to have access to 300+ bacterial proteomes, either!