Translational efficiency across healthy and tumor tissues is proliferation‐related

Abstract Different tissues express genes with particular codon usage and anticodon tRNA repertoires. However, the codon–anticodon co‐adaptation in humans is not completely understood, nor is its effect on tissue‐specific protein levels. Here, we first validated the accuracy of small RNA‐seq for tRNA...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xavier Hernandez‐Alias, Hannah Benisty, Martin H Schaefer, Luis Serrano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2020-03-01
Series:Molecular Systems Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.20199275
Description
Summary:Abstract Different tissues express genes with particular codon usage and anticodon tRNA repertoires. However, the codon–anticodon co‐adaptation in humans is not completely understood, nor is its effect on tissue‐specific protein levels. Here, we first validated the accuracy of small RNA‐seq for tRNA quantification across five human cell lines. We then analyzed the tRNA abundance of more than 8,000 tumor samples from TCGA, together with their paired mRNA‐seq and proteomics data, to determine the Supply‐to‐Demand Adaptation. We thereby elucidate that the dynamic adaptation of the tRNA pool is largely related to the proliferative state across tissues. The distribution of such tRNA pools over the whole cellular translatome affects the subsequent translational efficiency, which functionally determines a condition‐specific expression program both in healthy and tumor states. Furthermore, the aberrant translational efficiency of some codons in cancer, exemplified by ArgAGA, is associated with poor patient survival†. The regulation of these tRNA profiles is partly explained by the tRNA gene copy numbers and their promoter DNA methylation.
ISSN:1744-4292