Cargando…

Proteomic Shifts in Embryonic Stem Cells with Gene Dose Modifications Suggest the Presence of Balancer Proteins in Protein Regulatory Networks

Large numbers of protein expression changes are usually observed in mouse models for neurodegenerative diseases, even when only a single gene was mutated in each case. To study the effect of gene dose alterations on the cellular proteome, we carried out a proteomic investigation on murine embryonic...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mao, Lei, Zabel, Claus, Herrmann, Marion, Nolden, Tobias, Mertes, Florian, Magnol, Laetitia, Chabert, Caroline, Hartl, Daniela, Herault, Yann, Delabar, Jean Maurice, Manke, Thomas, Himmelbauer, Heinz, Klose, Joachim
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2077926/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18043732
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001218
_version_ 1782138128175202304
author Mao, Lei
Zabel, Claus
Herrmann, Marion
Nolden, Tobias
Mertes, Florian
Magnol, Laetitia
Chabert, Caroline
Hartl, Daniela
Herault, Yann
Delabar, Jean Maurice
Manke, Thomas
Himmelbauer, Heinz
Klose, Joachim
author_facet Mao, Lei
Zabel, Claus
Herrmann, Marion
Nolden, Tobias
Mertes, Florian
Magnol, Laetitia
Chabert, Caroline
Hartl, Daniela
Herault, Yann
Delabar, Jean Maurice
Manke, Thomas
Himmelbauer, Heinz
Klose, Joachim
author_sort Mao, Lei
collection PubMed
description Large numbers of protein expression changes are usually observed in mouse models for neurodegenerative diseases, even when only a single gene was mutated in each case. To study the effect of gene dose alterations on the cellular proteome, we carried out a proteomic investigation on murine embryonic stem cells that either overexpressed individual genes or displayed aneuploidy over a genomic region encompassing 14 genes. The number of variant proteins detected per cell line ranged between 70 and 110, and did not correlate with the number of modified genes. In cell lines with single gene mutations, up and down-regulated proteins were always in balance in comparison to parental cell lines regarding number as well as concentration of differentially expressed proteins. In contrast, dose alteration of 14 genes resulted in an unequal number of up and down-regulated proteins, though the balance was kept at the level of protein concentration. We propose that the observed protein changes might partially be explained by a proteomic network response. Hence, we hypothesize the existence of a class of “balancer” proteins within the proteomic network, defined as proteins that buffer or cushion a system, and thus oppose multiple system disturbances. Through database queries and resilience analysis of the protein interaction network, we found that potential balancer proteins are of high cellular abundance, possess a low number of direct interaction partners, and show great allelic variation. Moreover, balancer proteins contribute more heavily to the network entropy, and thus are of high importance in terms of system resilience. We propose that the “elasticity” of the proteomic regulatory network mediated by balancer proteins may compensate for changes that occur under diseased conditions.
format Text
id pubmed-2077926
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2007
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-20779262007-11-28 Proteomic Shifts in Embryonic Stem Cells with Gene Dose Modifications Suggest the Presence of Balancer Proteins in Protein Regulatory Networks Mao, Lei Zabel, Claus Herrmann, Marion Nolden, Tobias Mertes, Florian Magnol, Laetitia Chabert, Caroline Hartl, Daniela Herault, Yann Delabar, Jean Maurice Manke, Thomas Himmelbauer, Heinz Klose, Joachim PLoS One Research Article Large numbers of protein expression changes are usually observed in mouse models for neurodegenerative diseases, even when only a single gene was mutated in each case. To study the effect of gene dose alterations on the cellular proteome, we carried out a proteomic investigation on murine embryonic stem cells that either overexpressed individual genes or displayed aneuploidy over a genomic region encompassing 14 genes. The number of variant proteins detected per cell line ranged between 70 and 110, and did not correlate with the number of modified genes. In cell lines with single gene mutations, up and down-regulated proteins were always in balance in comparison to parental cell lines regarding number as well as concentration of differentially expressed proteins. In contrast, dose alteration of 14 genes resulted in an unequal number of up and down-regulated proteins, though the balance was kept at the level of protein concentration. We propose that the observed protein changes might partially be explained by a proteomic network response. Hence, we hypothesize the existence of a class of “balancer” proteins within the proteomic network, defined as proteins that buffer or cushion a system, and thus oppose multiple system disturbances. Through database queries and resilience analysis of the protein interaction network, we found that potential balancer proteins are of high cellular abundance, possess a low number of direct interaction partners, and show great allelic variation. Moreover, balancer proteins contribute more heavily to the network entropy, and thus are of high importance in terms of system resilience. We propose that the “elasticity” of the proteomic regulatory network mediated by balancer proteins may compensate for changes that occur under diseased conditions. Public Library of Science 2007-11-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2077926/ /pubmed/18043732 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001218 Text en Mao et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mao, Lei
Zabel, Claus
Herrmann, Marion
Nolden, Tobias
Mertes, Florian
Magnol, Laetitia
Chabert, Caroline
Hartl, Daniela
Herault, Yann
Delabar, Jean Maurice
Manke, Thomas
Himmelbauer, Heinz
Klose, Joachim
Proteomic Shifts in Embryonic Stem Cells with Gene Dose Modifications Suggest the Presence of Balancer Proteins in Protein Regulatory Networks
title Proteomic Shifts in Embryonic Stem Cells with Gene Dose Modifications Suggest the Presence of Balancer Proteins in Protein Regulatory Networks
title_full Proteomic Shifts in Embryonic Stem Cells with Gene Dose Modifications Suggest the Presence of Balancer Proteins in Protein Regulatory Networks
title_fullStr Proteomic Shifts in Embryonic Stem Cells with Gene Dose Modifications Suggest the Presence of Balancer Proteins in Protein Regulatory Networks
title_full_unstemmed Proteomic Shifts in Embryonic Stem Cells with Gene Dose Modifications Suggest the Presence of Balancer Proteins in Protein Regulatory Networks
title_short Proteomic Shifts in Embryonic Stem Cells with Gene Dose Modifications Suggest the Presence of Balancer Proteins in Protein Regulatory Networks
title_sort proteomic shifts in embryonic stem cells with gene dose modifications suggest the presence of balancer proteins in protein regulatory networks
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2077926/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18043732
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001218
work_keys_str_mv AT maolei proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT zabelclaus proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT herrmannmarion proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT noldentobias proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT mertesflorian proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT magnollaetitia proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT chabertcaroline proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT hartldaniela proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT heraultyann proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT delabarjeanmaurice proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT mankethomas proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT himmelbauerheinz proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks
AT klosejoachim proteomicshiftsinembryonicstemcellswithgenedosemodificationssuggestthepresenceofbalancerproteinsinproteinregulatorynetworks