Post-transcriptional regulation across human tissues.

PLoS Comput Biol
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

Transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation shape tissue-type-specific proteomes, but their relative contributions remain contested. Estimates of the factors determining protein levels in human tissues do not distinguish between (i) the factors determining the variability between the abundances of different proteins, i.e., mean-level-variability and, (ii) the factors determining the physiological variability of the same protein across different tissue types, i.e., across-tissues variability. We sought to estimate the contribution of transcript levels to these two orthogonal sources of variability, and found that scaled mRNA levels can account for most of the mean-level-variability but not necessarily for across-tissues variability. The reliable quantification of the latter estimate is limited by substantial measurement noise. However, protein-to-mRNA ratios exhibit substantial across-tissues variability that is functionally concerted and reproducible across different datasets, suggesting extensive post-transcriptional regulation. These results caution against estimating protein fold-changes from mRNA fold-changes between different cell-types, and highlight the contribution of post-transcriptional regulation to shaping tissue-type-specific proteomes.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
PLoS Comput Biol
Volume
13
Issue
5
Pages
e1005535
Date Published
2017 May
ISSN
1553-7358
DOI
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005535
PubMed ID
28481885
PubMed Central ID
PMC5440056
Links
Grant list
DP2 GM123497 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
R01 GM096193 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States