Maximum entropy determination of mammalian proteome dynamics

Author:

Dear Alexander J.12ORCID,Garcia Gonzalo A.2,Meisl Georg2ORCID,Collins Galen A.13,Knowles Tuomas P. J.24ORCID,Goldberg Alfred L.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell Biology, Blavatnik Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115

2. Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1EW, United Kingdom

3. Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Entomology & Plant Pathology, Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS 39762

4. Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB3 0HE, United Kingdom

Abstract

Full understanding of proteostasis and energy utilization in cells will require knowledge of the fraction of cell proteins being degraded with different half-lives and their rates of synthesis. We therefore developed a method to determine such information that combines mathematical analysis of protein degradation kinetics obtained in pulse–chase experiments with Bayesian data fitting using the maximum entropy principle. This approach will enable rapid analyses of whole-cell protein dynamics in different cell types, physiological states, and neurodegenerative disease. Using it, we obtained surprising insights about protein stabilities in cultured cells normally and upon activation of proteolysis by mTOR inhibition and increasing cAMP or cGMP. It revealed that >90% of protein content in dividing mammalian cell lines is long-lived, with half-lives of 24 to 200 h, and therefore comprises much of the proteins in daughter cells. The well-studied short-lived proteins (half-lives < 10 h) together comprise <2% of cell protein mass, but surprisingly account for 10 to 20% of measurable newly synthesized protein mass. Evolution thus appears to have minimized intracellular proteolysis except to rapidly eliminate misfolded and regulatory proteins.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences

EC | FP7 | Ideas | FP7 Ideas: European Research Council

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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