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Cells constantly encounter diverse stressors, including heat, oxidative damage, nutrient deprivation, and infection. Classical models of stress adaptation have emphasized canonical proteins of 100 or more amino acids, overlooking a vast repertoire of small proteins encoded by short open reading frames (sORFs). Recent advances in ribosome profiling and specialized proteomics have revealed that smORF‑derived peptides, often fewer than 100 codons, are widespread across bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes. Far from being translational “noise,” small proteins are structurally diverse, biochemically stable, and functionally integrated into stress response networks. They act as rapid regulators of membrane integrity, proteostasis, and signaling, frequently serving as interaction modules that modulate larger complexes or rewire pathways with minimal structural footprint. Their evolutionary landscape is dual: deeply conserved subsets sustain essential stress functions, while lineage‑specific microproteins emerge de novo to fine‑tune adaptation in particular ecological contexts. This dynamic balance of conservation and innovation positions small proteins as critical yet underappreciated components of cellular resilience. By enabling swift, reversible proteomic remodeling, they provide a missing link between transcriptional control and immediate stress adaptation. Recognition of the “small proteome" challenges long‑standing paradigms and opens new avenues for understanding and manipulating stress biology across all domains of life.