Published September 25, 2013 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Quantifying Condition-Dependent Intracellular Protein Levels Enables High-Precision Fitness Estimates

  • 1. New York University
  • 2. Harvard University
  • 3. University of Chicago

Description

Countless studies monitor the growth rate of microbial populations as a measure of fitness. However, an enormous gap separates growth-rate differences measurable in the laboratory from those that natural selection can distinguish efficiently. Taking advantage of the recent discovery that transcript and protein levels in budding yeast closely track growth rate, we explore the possibility that growth rate can be more sensitively inferred by monitoring the proteomic response to growth, rather than growth itself. We find a set of proteins whose levels, in aggregate, enable prediction of growth rate to a higher precision than direct measurements. However, we find little overlap between these proteins and those that closely track growth rate in other studies. These results suggest that, in yeast, the pathways that set the pace of cell division can differ depending on the growth-altering stimulus. Still, with proper validation, protein measurements can provide high-precision growth estimates that allow extension of phenotypic growth-based assays closer to the limits of evolutionary selection.

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journal.pone.0075320.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0075320
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10795

Funding

National Institutes of Health
1R01GM088344-01
National Institutes of Health
P50GM068763

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology