Spatiotemporal dissection of the cell cycle with single-cell proteogenomics

被引:0
作者
Diana Mahdessian
Anthony J. Cesnik
Christian Gnann
Frida Danielsson
Lovisa Stenström
Muhammad Arif
Cheng Zhang
Trang Le
Fredric Johansson
Rutger Schutten
Anna Bäckström
Ulrika Axelsson
Peter Thul
Nathan H. Cho
Oana Carja
Mathias Uhlén
Adil Mardinoglu
Charlotte Stadler
Cecilia Lindskog
Burcu Ayoglu
Manuel D. Leonetti
Fredrik Pontén
Devin P. Sullivan
Emma Lundberg
机构
[1] KTH - Royal Institute of Technology,Science for Life Laboratory, School of Engineering Sciences in Chemistry, Biotechnology and Health
[2] Stanford University,Department of Genetics
[3] Chan Zuckerberg Biohub,Computational Biology Department
[4] San Francisco,Centre for Host–Microbiome Interactions, Faculty of Dentistry, Oral & Craniofacial Sciences
[5] Carnegie Mellon University,Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology
[6] King’s College London,undefined
[7] Uppsala University,undefined
来源
Nature | 2021年 / 590卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The cell cycle, over which cells grow and divide, is a fundamental process of life. Its dysregulation has devastating consequences, including cancer1–3. The cell cycle is driven by precise regulation of proteins in time and space, which creates variability between individual proliferating cells. To our knowledge, no systematic investigations of such cell-to-cell proteomic variability exist. Here we present a comprehensive, spatiotemporal map of human proteomic heterogeneity by integrating proteomics at subcellular resolution with single-cell transcriptomics and precise temporal measurements of individual cells in the cell cycle. We show that around one-fifth of the human proteome displays cell-to-cell variability, identify hundreds of proteins with previously unknown associations with mitosis and the cell cycle, and provide evidence that several of these proteins have oncogenic functions. Our results show that cell cycle progression explains less than half of all cell-to-cell variability, and that most cycling proteins are regulated post-translationally, rather than by transcriptomic cycling. These proteins are disproportionately phosphorylated by kinases that regulate cell fate, whereas non-cycling proteins that vary between cells are more likely to be modified by kinases that regulate metabolism. This spatially resolved proteomic map of the cell cycle is integrated into the Human Protein Atlas and will serve as a resource for accelerating molecular studies of the human cell cycle and cell proliferation.
引用
收藏
页码:649 / 654
页数:5
相关论文
共 151 条
[1]  
Malumbres M(2009)Cell cycle, CDKs and cancer: a changing paradigm Nat. Rev. Cancer 9 153-166
[2]  
Barbacid M(2004)G1 cell-cycle control and cancer Nature 432 298-306
[3]  
Massagué J(1994)Cell cycle control and cancer Science 266 1821-1828
[4]  
Hartwell LH(1995)The retinoblastoma protein and cell cycle control Cell 81 323-330
[5]  
Kastan MB(1995)Principles of CDK regulation Nature 374 131-134
[6]  
Weinberg RA(2013)Ubiquitin ligases and cell cycle control Annu. Rev. Biochem. 82 387-414
[7]  
Morgan DO(1996)How proteolysis drives the cell cycle Science 274 1652-1659
[8]  
Teixeira LK(2001)Transcriptional regulation and function during the human cell cycle Nat. Genet. 27 48-54
[9]  
Reed SI(2002)Identification of genes periodically expressed in the human cell cycle and their expression in tumors Mol. Biol. Cell 13 1977-2000
[10]  
King RW(2017)Comparative cell cycle transcriptomics reveals synchronization of developmental transcription factor networks in cancer cells PLoS One 12 e0188772-821