Litcius/Paper detail

Quantitative Control for Stoichiometric Protein Synthesis

James Taggart, Jean‐Benoît Lalanne, Gene‐Wei Li

2021Annual Review of Microbiology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacterial protein synthesis rates have evolved to maintain preferred stoichiometries at striking precision, from the components of protein complexes to constituents of entire pathways. Setting relative protein production rates to be well within a factor of two requires concerted tuning of transcription, RNA turnover, and translation, allowing many potential regulatory strategies to achieve the preferred output. The last decade has seen a greatly expanded capacity for precise interrogation of each step of the central dogma genome-wide. Here, we summarize how these technologies have shaped the current understanding of diverse bacterial regulatory architectures underpinning stoichiometric protein synthesis. We focus on the emerging expanded view of bacterial operons, which encode diverse primary and secondary mRNA structures for tuning protein stoichiometry. Emphasis is placed on how quantitative tuning is achieved. We discuss the challenges and open questions in the application of quantitative, genome-wide methodologies to the problem of precise protein production.

Topics & Concepts

Computational biologyOperonBiologyProtein biosynthesisTranscription (linguistics)GenomeBacterial genome sizeBacterial proteinTranslation (biology)RNAGeneticsMessenger RNAGenePhilosophyLinguisticsEscherichia coliBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies