Cell Reports (Jan 2016)

The Cost of Protein Production

  • Moshe Kafri,
  • Eyal Metzl-Raz,
  • Ghil Jona,
  • Naama Barkai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.12.015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 22 – 31

Abstract

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The economy of protein production is central to cell physiology, being intimately linked with cell division rate and cell size. Attempts to model cellular physiology are limited by the scarcity of experimental data defining the molecular processes limiting protein expression. Here, we distinguish the relative contribution of gene transcription and protein translation to the slower proliferation of budding yeast producing excess levels of unneeded proteins. In contrast to widely held assumptions, rapidly growing cells are not universally limited by ribosome content. Rather, transcription dominates cost under some conditions (e.g., low phosphate), translation in others (e.g., low nitrogen), and both in other conditions (e.g., rich media). Furthermore, cells adapted to enforced protein production by becoming larger and increasing their endogenous protein levels, suggesting limited competition for common resources. We propose that rapidly growing cells do not exhaust their resources to maximize growth but maintain sufficient reserves to accommodate changing requirements.

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