TY - JOUR
T1 - The effect of heterogeneous Transcription Start Sites (TSS) on the translatome
T2 - Implications for the mammalian cellular phenotype
AU - Dieudonné, Francois Xavier
AU - O'Connor, Patrick B.F.
AU - Gubler-Jaquier, Pascale
AU - Yasrebi, Haleh
AU - Conne, Beatrice
AU - Nikolaev, Sergey
AU - Antonarakis, Stylianos
AU - Baranov, Pavel V.
AU - Curran, Joseph
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Dieudonné et al.
PY - 2015/11/21
Y1 - 2015/11/21
N2 - Background: The genetic program, as manifested as the cellular phenotype, is in large part dictated by the cell's protein composition. Since characterisation of the proteome remains technically laborious it is attractive to define the genetic expression profile using the transcriptome. However, the transcriptional landscape is complex and it is unclear as to what extent it reflects the ribosome associated mRNA population (the translatome). This is particularly pertinent for genes using multiple transcriptional start sites (TSS) generating mRNAs with heterogeneous 5' transcript leaders (5'TL). Furthermore, the relative abundance of the TSS gene variants is frequently cell-type specific. Indeed, promoter switches have been reported in pathologies such as cancer. The consequences of this 5'TL heterogeneity within the transcriptome for the translatome remain unresolved. This is not a moot point because the 5'TL plays a key role in regulating mRNA recruitment onto polysomes. Results: In this article, we have characterised both the transcriptome and translatome of the MCF7 (tumoural) and MCF10A (non-tumoural) cell lines. We identified ~550 genes exhibiting differential translation efficiency (TE). In itself, this is maybe not surprising. However, by focusing on genes exhibiting TSS heterogeneity we observed distinct differential promoter usage patterns in both the transcriptome and translatome. Only a minor fraction of these genes belonged to those exhibiting differential TE. Nonetheless, reporter assays demonstrated that the TSS variants impacted on the translational readout both quantitatively (the overall amount of protein expressed) and qualitatively (the nature of the proteins expressed). Conclusions: The results point to considerable and distinct cell-specific 5'TL heterogeneity within both the transcriptome and translatome of the two cell lines analysed. This observation is in-line with the ribosome filter hypothesis which posits that the ribosomal machine can selectively filter information from within the transcriptome. As such it cautions against the simple extrapolation transcriptome proteome. Furthermore, polysomal occupancy of specific gene 5'TL variants may also serve as novel disease biomarkers.
AB - Background: The genetic program, as manifested as the cellular phenotype, is in large part dictated by the cell's protein composition. Since characterisation of the proteome remains technically laborious it is attractive to define the genetic expression profile using the transcriptome. However, the transcriptional landscape is complex and it is unclear as to what extent it reflects the ribosome associated mRNA population (the translatome). This is particularly pertinent for genes using multiple transcriptional start sites (TSS) generating mRNAs with heterogeneous 5' transcript leaders (5'TL). Furthermore, the relative abundance of the TSS gene variants is frequently cell-type specific. Indeed, promoter switches have been reported in pathologies such as cancer. The consequences of this 5'TL heterogeneity within the transcriptome for the translatome remain unresolved. This is not a moot point because the 5'TL plays a key role in regulating mRNA recruitment onto polysomes. Results: In this article, we have characterised both the transcriptome and translatome of the MCF7 (tumoural) and MCF10A (non-tumoural) cell lines. We identified ~550 genes exhibiting differential translation efficiency (TE). In itself, this is maybe not surprising. However, by focusing on genes exhibiting TSS heterogeneity we observed distinct differential promoter usage patterns in both the transcriptome and translatome. Only a minor fraction of these genes belonged to those exhibiting differential TE. Nonetheless, reporter assays demonstrated that the TSS variants impacted on the translational readout both quantitatively (the overall amount of protein expressed) and qualitatively (the nature of the proteins expressed). Conclusions: The results point to considerable and distinct cell-specific 5'TL heterogeneity within both the transcriptome and translatome of the two cell lines analysed. This observation is in-line with the ribosome filter hypothesis which posits that the ribosomal machine can selectively filter information from within the transcriptome. As such it cautions against the simple extrapolation transcriptome proteome. Furthermore, polysomal occupancy of specific gene 5'TL variants may also serve as novel disease biomarkers.
KW - 5' mRNA heterogeneity
KW - 5' transcript leader
KW - Cancer
KW - Proteome
KW - Transcriptome
KW - Translation
KW - Translatome
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84959244906&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12864-015-2179-8
DO - 10.1186/s12864-015-2179-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 26589636
AN - SCOPUS:84959244906
SN - 1471-2164
VL - 16
JO - BMC Genomics
JF - BMC Genomics
IS - 1
M1 - 986
ER -