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Epigenetic Variability Confounds Transcriptome but Not Proteome Profiling for Coexpression-based Gene Function Prediction

Genes are often coexpressed with their genomic neighbors, even if these are functionally unrelated. For small expression changes driven by genetic variation within the same cell type, non-functional mRNA coexpression is not propagated to the protein level. However, it is unclear if protein levels ar...

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Autores principales: Grabowski, Piotr, Kustatscher, Georg, Rappsilber, Juri
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6210221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30042154
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA118.000935
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author Grabowski, Piotr
Kustatscher, Georg
Rappsilber, Juri
author_facet Grabowski, Piotr
Kustatscher, Georg
Rappsilber, Juri
author_sort Grabowski, Piotr
collection PubMed
description Genes are often coexpressed with their genomic neighbors, even if these are functionally unrelated. For small expression changes driven by genetic variation within the same cell type, non-functional mRNA coexpression is not propagated to the protein level. However, it is unclear if protein levels are also buffered against any non-functional mRNA coexpression accompanying large, regulated changes in the gene expression program, such as those occurring during cell differentiation. Here, we address this question by analyzing mRNA and protein expression changes for housekeeping genes across 20 mouse tissues. We find that a large proportion of mRNA coexpression is indeed non-functional and does not lead to coexpressed proteins. Chromosomal proximity of genes explains a proportion of this nonfunctional mRNA coexpression. However, the main driver of non-functional mRNA coexpression across mouse tissues is epigenetic similarity. Both factors together provide an explanation for why monitoring protein coexpression outperforms mRNA coexpression data in gene function prediction. Furthermore, this suggests that housekeeping genes translocating during evolution within genomic subcompartments might maintain their broad expression pattern.
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spelling pubmed-62102212018-11-02 Epigenetic Variability Confounds Transcriptome but Not Proteome Profiling for Coexpression-based Gene Function Prediction Grabowski, Piotr Kustatscher, Georg Rappsilber, Juri Mol Cell Proteomics Research Genes are often coexpressed with their genomic neighbors, even if these are functionally unrelated. For small expression changes driven by genetic variation within the same cell type, non-functional mRNA coexpression is not propagated to the protein level. However, it is unclear if protein levels are also buffered against any non-functional mRNA coexpression accompanying large, regulated changes in the gene expression program, such as those occurring during cell differentiation. Here, we address this question by analyzing mRNA and protein expression changes for housekeeping genes across 20 mouse tissues. We find that a large proportion of mRNA coexpression is indeed non-functional and does not lead to coexpressed proteins. Chromosomal proximity of genes explains a proportion of this nonfunctional mRNA coexpression. However, the main driver of non-functional mRNA coexpression across mouse tissues is epigenetic similarity. Both factors together provide an explanation for why monitoring protein coexpression outperforms mRNA coexpression data in gene function prediction. Furthermore, this suggests that housekeeping genes translocating during evolution within genomic subcompartments might maintain their broad expression pattern. The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2018-11 2018-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6210221/ /pubmed/30042154 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA118.000935 Text en © 2018 Grabowski et al. Published by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version open access under the terms of the Creative Commons CC-BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) .
spellingShingle Research
Grabowski, Piotr
Kustatscher, Georg
Rappsilber, Juri
Epigenetic Variability Confounds Transcriptome but Not Proteome Profiling for Coexpression-based Gene Function Prediction
title Epigenetic Variability Confounds Transcriptome but Not Proteome Profiling for Coexpression-based Gene Function Prediction
title_full Epigenetic Variability Confounds Transcriptome but Not Proteome Profiling for Coexpression-based Gene Function Prediction
title_fullStr Epigenetic Variability Confounds Transcriptome but Not Proteome Profiling for Coexpression-based Gene Function Prediction
title_full_unstemmed Epigenetic Variability Confounds Transcriptome but Not Proteome Profiling for Coexpression-based Gene Function Prediction
title_short Epigenetic Variability Confounds Transcriptome but Not Proteome Profiling for Coexpression-based Gene Function Prediction
title_sort epigenetic variability confounds transcriptome but not proteome profiling for coexpression-based gene function prediction
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6210221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30042154
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA118.000935
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