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Transcriptional Bursting Explains the Noise-Versus-Mean Relationship in mRNA and Protein Levels.

Authors :
Dar RD
Shaffer SM
Singh A
Razooky BS
Simpson ML
Raj A
Weinberger LS
Source :
PloS one [PLoS One] 2016 Jul 28; Vol. 11 (7), pp. e0158298. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Jul 28 (Print Publication: 2016).
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Recent analysis demonstrates that the HIV-1 Long Terminal Repeat (HIV LTR) promoter exhibits a range of possible transcriptional burst sizes and frequencies for any mean-expression level. However, these results have also been interpreted as demonstrating that cell-to-cell expression variability (noise) and mean are uncorrelated, a significant deviation from previous results. Here, we re-examine the available mRNA and protein abundance data for the HIV LTR and find that noise in mRNA and protein expression scales inversely with the mean along analytically predicted transcriptional burst-size manifolds. We then experimentally perturb transcriptional activity to test a prediction of the multiple burst-size model: that increasing burst frequency will cause mRNA noise to decrease along given burst-size lines as mRNA levels increase. The data show that mRNA and protein noise decrease as mean expression increases, supporting the canonical inverse correlation between noise and mean.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1932-6203
Volume :
11
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
PloS one
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27467384
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158298