Accounting for Experimental Noise Reveals That mRNA Levels, Amplified by Post-Transcriptional Processes, Largely Determine Steady-State Protein Levels in Yeast
- 1. Harvard University
- 2. University of Chicago
Description
Cells respond to their environment by modulating protein levels through mRNA transcription and post-transcriptional control. Modest observed correlations between global steady-state mRNA and protein measurements have been interpreted as evidence that mRNA levels determine roughly 40% of the variation in protein levels, indicating dominant post-transcriptional effects. However, the techniques underlying these conclusions, such as correlation and regression, yield biased results when data are noisy, missing systematically, and collinear---properties of mRNA and protein measurements---which motivated us to revisit this subject. Noise-robust analyses of 24 studies of budding yeast reveal that mRNA levels explain more than 85% of the variation in steady-state protein levels. Protein levels are not proportional to mRNA levels, but rise much more rapidly. Regulation of translation suffices to explain this nonlinear effect, revealing post-transcriptional amplification of, rather than competition with, transcriptional signals. These results substantially revise widely credited models of protein-level regulation, and introduce multiple noise-aware approaches essential for proper analysis of many biological phenomena.
Data availability
All raw input and processed output data have been uploaded to Dryad as indicated in the manuscript. doi: 10.5061/dryad.rg367; doi: 10.5061/dryad.d644fFiles
journal.pgen.1005206.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1371/journal.pgen.1005206
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:10234
Related works
- Cites
- https://doi.org/10.1101/009472 (URL)
Funding
- National Institutes of Health
- GM088344
- National Institutes of Health
- GM096193
- Alfred P. Sloan
- Fellowship