Post-Translational Dosage Compensation Buffers Genetic Perturbations to Stoichiometry of Protein Complexes.

Understanding buffering mechanisms for various perturbations is essential for understanding robustness in cellular systems. Protein-level dosage compensation, which arises when changes in gene copy number do not translate linearly into protein level, is one mechanism for buffering against genetic pe...

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Main Authors: Koji Ishikawa, Koji Makanae, Shintaro Iwasaki, Nicholas T Ingolia, Hisao Moriya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5266272?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-3a8f2cf170504a45ab038a58c5a859362020-11-24T21:41:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042017-01-01131e100655410.1371/journal.pgen.1006554Post-Translational Dosage Compensation Buffers Genetic Perturbations to Stoichiometry of Protein Complexes.Koji IshikawaKoji MakanaeShintaro IwasakiNicholas T IngoliaHisao MoriyaUnderstanding buffering mechanisms for various perturbations is essential for understanding robustness in cellular systems. Protein-level dosage compensation, which arises when changes in gene copy number do not translate linearly into protein level, is one mechanism for buffering against genetic perturbations. Here, we present an approach to identify genes with dosage compensation by increasing the copy number of individual genes using the genetic tug-of-war technique. Our screen of chromosome I suggests that dosage-compensated genes constitute approximately 10% of the genome and consist predominantly of subunits of multi-protein complexes. Importantly, because subunit levels are regulated in a stoichiometry-dependent manner, dosage compensation plays a crucial role in maintaining subunit stoichiometries. Indeed, we observed changes in the levels of a complex when its subunit stoichiometries were perturbed. We further analyzed compensation mechanisms using a proteasome-defective mutant as well as ribosome profiling, which provided strong evidence for compensation by ubiquitin-dependent degradation but not reduced translational efficiency. Thus, our study provides a systematic understanding of dosage compensation and highlights that this post-translational regulation is a critical aspect of robustness in cellular systems.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5266272?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Koji Ishikawa
Koji Makanae
Shintaro Iwasaki
Nicholas T Ingolia
Hisao Moriya
spellingShingle Koji Ishikawa
Koji Makanae
Shintaro Iwasaki
Nicholas T Ingolia
Hisao Moriya
Post-Translational Dosage Compensation Buffers Genetic Perturbations to Stoichiometry of Protein Complexes.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Koji Ishikawa
Koji Makanae
Shintaro Iwasaki
Nicholas T Ingolia
Hisao Moriya
author_sort Koji Ishikawa
title Post-Translational Dosage Compensation Buffers Genetic Perturbations to Stoichiometry of Protein Complexes.
title_short Post-Translational Dosage Compensation Buffers Genetic Perturbations to Stoichiometry of Protein Complexes.
title_full Post-Translational Dosage Compensation Buffers Genetic Perturbations to Stoichiometry of Protein Complexes.
title_fullStr Post-Translational Dosage Compensation Buffers Genetic Perturbations to Stoichiometry of Protein Complexes.
title_full_unstemmed Post-Translational Dosage Compensation Buffers Genetic Perturbations to Stoichiometry of Protein Complexes.
title_sort post-translational dosage compensation buffers genetic perturbations to stoichiometry of protein complexes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Understanding buffering mechanisms for various perturbations is essential for understanding robustness in cellular systems. Protein-level dosage compensation, which arises when changes in gene copy number do not translate linearly into protein level, is one mechanism for buffering against genetic perturbations. Here, we present an approach to identify genes with dosage compensation by increasing the copy number of individual genes using the genetic tug-of-war technique. Our screen of chromosome I suggests that dosage-compensated genes constitute approximately 10% of the genome and consist predominantly of subunits of multi-protein complexes. Importantly, because subunit levels are regulated in a stoichiometry-dependent manner, dosage compensation plays a crucial role in maintaining subunit stoichiometries. Indeed, we observed changes in the levels of a complex when its subunit stoichiometries were perturbed. We further analyzed compensation mechanisms using a proteasome-defective mutant as well as ribosome profiling, which provided strong evidence for compensation by ubiquitin-dependent degradation but not reduced translational efficiency. Thus, our study provides a systematic understanding of dosage compensation and highlights that this post-translational regulation is a critical aspect of robustness in cellular systems.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5266272?pdf=render
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