Linking post-translational modifications and variation of phenotypic traits

Archive ouverte

Albertin, Warren | Marullo, Philippe | Bely, Marina | Aigle, Michel | Bourgais, Aurelie | Langella, Olivier | Balliau, Thierry | Chevret, Didier | Valot, Benoit | da Silva, Telma | Dillmann, Christine | de Vienne, Dominique | Sicard, Delphine

Edité par CCSD ; American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology -

Enzymes can be post-translationally modified, leading to isoforms with different properties. The phenotypic consequences of the quantitative variability of isoforms have never been studied. We used quantitative proteomics to dissect the relationships between the abundances of the enzymes and isoforms of alcoholic fermentation, metabolic traits, and growth-related traits in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Although the enzymatic pool allocated to the fermentation proteome was constant over the culture media and the strains considered, there was variation in abundance of individual enzymes and sometimes much more of their isoforms, which suggests the existence of selective constraints on total protein abundance and trade-offs between isoforms. Variations in abundance of some isoforms were significantly associated to metabolic traits and growth-related traits. In particular, cell size and maximum population size were highly correlated to the degree of N-terminal acetylation of the alcohol dehydrogenase. The fermentation proteome was found to be shaped by human selection, through the differential targeting of a few isoforms for each food-processing origin of strains. These results highlight the importance of post-translational modifications in the diversity of metabolic and life-history traits.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Fermentation rate, population size, CO2 flux and quantitative proteomics: a multi-level approach applied to alcoholic fermentation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Archive ouverte | Albertin, Warren | CCSD

absent

Evidence for autotetraploidy associated with reproductive isolation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: towards a new domesticated species

Archive ouverte | Albertin, Warren | CCSD

International audience. Partial or whole-genome duplications have played a major role in the evolution of new species. We have investigated the variation of ploidy level in a panel of domesticated strains of Sacchar...

A systems approach to elucidate heterosis of protein abundances in yeast

Archive ouverte | Blein-Nicolas, Melisande | CCSD

International audience. Heterosis is a universal phenomenon that has major implications in evolution and is of tremendous agro-economic value. To study the molecular manifestations of heterosis and to find factors t...

Chargement des enrichissements...