Protein degradation and growth dependent dilution substantially shape mammalian proteomes

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Protein degradation and growth dependent dilution substantially shape mammalian proteomes

Authors

Leduc, A.; Slavov, N.

Abstract

Cellular protein concentrations are maintained through a balance of synthesis and clearance. Clearance occurs through both protein degradation and growth-dependent dilution. At slow growth, clearance is dominated by degradation, which leads to the accumulation of long lived proteins. At fast growth, however, it is dominated by dilution, preventing this accumulation. Thus, the concentration of long lived proteins will be reduced unless cells compensate by preferentially increasing synthesis rates. To determine the dominant regulatory mechanisms, we quantified the degree of compensation between activated and resting human B cells and across mouse tissues. The results indicate that growth-dependent dilution is insufficiently compensated for by changes in protein synthesis, and it accounts for over a third of the concentration changes between high and low growth conditions. Furthermore, we find that about 25 % of the differences in protein concentration across all tissues are controlled by protein clearance. When comparing only slowly growing tissues such as the brain and pancreas, clearance differences can explain as much as 42 %. Within a tissue or cell type, clearance variation is sufficient to account for 50 % of the abundance variation for all measured proteins at slow growth, contrasted with 7 % at fast growth. Thus, our model unifies previous observations with our new results and highlights a context-dependent and larger than previously appreciated contribution of protein degradation in shaping protein variation both across the proteome and across cell states.

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