Options
Mammalian protein expression noise: scaling principles and the implications for knockdown experiments
Date Issued
2012
Date Available
2013-11-29T10:13:33Z
Abstract
The abundance of a particular protein varies both over time within a single mammalian cell and between cells of a genetically identical population. Here, we investigate the properties of such noisy protein expression in mammalian cells by combining theoretical and experimental approaches. The gamma distribution model is well-known to describe cell-to-cell variability in protein expression in a variety of common scenarios. This model predicts, and experiments show, that when protein levels are manipulated by altering transcription rates or mRNA half-life, protein expression noise, defined as the squared coefficient of variation, is constant. In contrast, we also demonstrate that when protein levels are manipulated by changing protein half-life, as mean levels increase, noise decreases. Thus, in mammalian cells, the scaling relationship between mean protein levels and expression noise depends on how mean levels are perturbed. Therefore it may be important to consider how common experimental manipulations of pro in expression affect not only mean levels, but also noise levels. In the context of knockdown experiments, natural cell-tocell variability in protein expression implies that a particular cell from the knockdown population may have higher protein levels than a cell from the control population. Simulations and experimental data suggest that approximately three-fold knockdown in mean expression levels can reduce such so-called “overlap probability” to less than ~10%. This has implications for the interpretation of knockdown experiments when the readout is a single cell measure.
Other Sponsorship
SFI
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
The Royal Society of Chemistry
Journal
Molecular BioSystems
Volume
8
Issue
11
Start Page
3068
End Page
3076
Copyright (Published Version)
2012 The Royal Society of Chemistry
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
Loading...
Name
Paper6.pdf
Size
2.01 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
21a9c99fd1009c6e3ed212c7836c42e6
Owning collection