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Comparative Analysis of Proteome and Transcriptome Variation in Mouse

The relationships between the levels of transcripts and the levels of the proteins they encode have not been examined comprehensively in mammals, although previous work in plants and yeast suggest a surprisingly modest correlation. We have examined this issue using a genetic approach in which natura...

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Autores principales: Ghazalpour, Anatole, Bennett, Brian, Petyuk, Vladislav A., Orozco, Luz, Hagopian, Raffi, Mungrue, Imran N., Farber, Charles R., Sinsheimer, Janet, Kang, Hyun M., Furlotte, Nicholas, Park, Christopher C., Wen, Ping-Zi, Brewer, Heather, Weitz, Karl, Camp, David G., Pan, Calvin, Yordanova, Roumyana, Neuhaus, Isaac, Tilford, Charles, Siemers, Nathan, Gargalovic, Peter, Eskin, Eleazar, Kirchgessner, Todd, Smith, Desmond J., Smith, Richard D., Lusis, Aldons J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3111477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21695224
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001393
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author Ghazalpour, Anatole
Bennett, Brian
Petyuk, Vladislav A.
Orozco, Luz
Hagopian, Raffi
Mungrue, Imran N.
Farber, Charles R.
Sinsheimer, Janet
Kang, Hyun M.
Furlotte, Nicholas
Park, Christopher C.
Wen, Ping-Zi
Brewer, Heather
Weitz, Karl
Camp, David G.
Pan, Calvin
Yordanova, Roumyana
Neuhaus, Isaac
Tilford, Charles
Siemers, Nathan
Gargalovic, Peter
Eskin, Eleazar
Kirchgessner, Todd
Smith, Desmond J.
Smith, Richard D.
Lusis, Aldons J.
author_facet Ghazalpour, Anatole
Bennett, Brian
Petyuk, Vladislav A.
Orozco, Luz
Hagopian, Raffi
Mungrue, Imran N.
Farber, Charles R.
Sinsheimer, Janet
Kang, Hyun M.
Furlotte, Nicholas
Park, Christopher C.
Wen, Ping-Zi
Brewer, Heather
Weitz, Karl
Camp, David G.
Pan, Calvin
Yordanova, Roumyana
Neuhaus, Isaac
Tilford, Charles
Siemers, Nathan
Gargalovic, Peter
Eskin, Eleazar
Kirchgessner, Todd
Smith, Desmond J.
Smith, Richard D.
Lusis, Aldons J.
author_sort Ghazalpour, Anatole
collection PubMed
description The relationships between the levels of transcripts and the levels of the proteins they encode have not been examined comprehensively in mammals, although previous work in plants and yeast suggest a surprisingly modest correlation. We have examined this issue using a genetic approach in which natural variations were used to perturb both transcript levels and protein levels among inbred strains of mice. We quantified over 5,000 peptides and over 22,000 transcripts in livers of 97 inbred and recombinant inbred strains and focused on the 7,185 most heritable transcripts and 486 most reliable proteins. The transcript levels were quantified by microarray analysis in three replicates and the proteins were quantified by Liquid Chromatography–Mass Spectrometry using O(18)-reference-based isotope labeling approach. We show that the levels of transcripts and proteins correlate significantly for only about half of the genes tested, with an average correlation of 0.27, and the correlations of transcripts and proteins varied depending on the cellular location and biological function of the gene. We examined technical and biological factors that could contribute to the modest correlation. For example, differential splicing clearly affects the analyses for certain genes; but, based on deep sequencing, this does not substantially contribute to the overall estimate of the correlation. We also employed genome-wide association analyses to map loci controlling both transcript and protein levels. Surprisingly, little overlap was observed between the protein- and transcript-mapped loci. We have typed numerous clinically relevant traits among the strains, including adiposity, lipoprotein levels, and tissue parameters. Using correlation analysis, we found that a low number of clinical trait relationships are preserved between the protein and mRNA gene products and that the majority of such relationships are specific to either the protein levels or transcript levels. Surprisingly, transcript levels were more strongly correlated with clinical traits than protein levels. In light of the widespread use of high-throughput technologies in both clinical and basic research, the results presented have practical as well as basic implications.
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spelling pubmed-31114772011-06-21 Comparative Analysis of Proteome and Transcriptome Variation in Mouse Ghazalpour, Anatole Bennett, Brian Petyuk, Vladislav A. Orozco, Luz Hagopian, Raffi Mungrue, Imran N. Farber, Charles R. Sinsheimer, Janet Kang, Hyun M. Furlotte, Nicholas Park, Christopher C. Wen, Ping-Zi Brewer, Heather Weitz, Karl Camp, David G. Pan, Calvin Yordanova, Roumyana Neuhaus, Isaac Tilford, Charles Siemers, Nathan Gargalovic, Peter Eskin, Eleazar Kirchgessner, Todd Smith, Desmond J. Smith, Richard D. Lusis, Aldons J. PLoS Genet Research Article The relationships between the levels of transcripts and the levels of the proteins they encode have not been examined comprehensively in mammals, although previous work in plants and yeast suggest a surprisingly modest correlation. We have examined this issue using a genetic approach in which natural variations were used to perturb both transcript levels and protein levels among inbred strains of mice. We quantified over 5,000 peptides and over 22,000 transcripts in livers of 97 inbred and recombinant inbred strains and focused on the 7,185 most heritable transcripts and 486 most reliable proteins. The transcript levels were quantified by microarray analysis in three replicates and the proteins were quantified by Liquid Chromatography–Mass Spectrometry using O(18)-reference-based isotope labeling approach. We show that the levels of transcripts and proteins correlate significantly for only about half of the genes tested, with an average correlation of 0.27, and the correlations of transcripts and proteins varied depending on the cellular location and biological function of the gene. We examined technical and biological factors that could contribute to the modest correlation. For example, differential splicing clearly affects the analyses for certain genes; but, based on deep sequencing, this does not substantially contribute to the overall estimate of the correlation. We also employed genome-wide association analyses to map loci controlling both transcript and protein levels. Surprisingly, little overlap was observed between the protein- and transcript-mapped loci. We have typed numerous clinically relevant traits among the strains, including adiposity, lipoprotein levels, and tissue parameters. Using correlation analysis, we found that a low number of clinical trait relationships are preserved between the protein and mRNA gene products and that the majority of such relationships are specific to either the protein levels or transcript levels. Surprisingly, transcript levels were more strongly correlated with clinical traits than protein levels. In light of the widespread use of high-throughput technologies in both clinical and basic research, the results presented have practical as well as basic implications. Public Library of Science 2011-06-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3111477/ /pubmed/21695224 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001393 Text en Ghazalpour 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
Ghazalpour, Anatole
Bennett, Brian
Petyuk, Vladislav A.
Orozco, Luz
Hagopian, Raffi
Mungrue, Imran N.
Farber, Charles R.
Sinsheimer, Janet
Kang, Hyun M.
Furlotte, Nicholas
Park, Christopher C.
Wen, Ping-Zi
Brewer, Heather
Weitz, Karl
Camp, David G.
Pan, Calvin
Yordanova, Roumyana
Neuhaus, Isaac
Tilford, Charles
Siemers, Nathan
Gargalovic, Peter
Eskin, Eleazar
Kirchgessner, Todd
Smith, Desmond J.
Smith, Richard D.
Lusis, Aldons J.
Comparative Analysis of Proteome and Transcriptome Variation in Mouse
title Comparative Analysis of Proteome and Transcriptome Variation in Mouse
title_full Comparative Analysis of Proteome and Transcriptome Variation in Mouse
title_fullStr Comparative Analysis of Proteome and Transcriptome Variation in Mouse
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Analysis of Proteome and Transcriptome Variation in Mouse
title_short Comparative Analysis of Proteome and Transcriptome Variation in Mouse
title_sort comparative analysis of proteome and transcriptome variation in mouse
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3111477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21695224
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001393
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