Comparative analysis of gene expression on mRNA and protein level during development of Streptomyces cultures by using singular value decomposition
Language English Country Germany Media print
Document type Comparative Study, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- MeSH
- Bacterial Proteins genetics metabolism MeSH
- RNA, Bacterial genetics metabolism MeSH
- Citric Acid Cycle MeSH
- Data Interpretation, Statistical MeSH
- RNA, Messenger genetics metabolism MeSH
- Heat-Shock Proteins genetics metabolism MeSH
- Proteomics methods statistics & numerical data MeSH
- Gene Expression Profiling methods statistics & numerical data MeSH
- Streptomyces genetics growth & development metabolism MeSH
- Systems Biology MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Comparative Study MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Bacterial Proteins MeSH
- RNA, Bacterial MeSH
- RNA, Messenger MeSH
- Heat-Shock Proteins MeSH
This paper describes a comparative systems level analysis of the developmental proteome and transcriptome in the model antibiotic-producing eubacterium Streptomyces coelicolor, cultured on different media. The analysis formulates expression as the superposition of effects of regulatory networks and biological processes which can be identified using singular value decomposition (SVD) of a data matrix formed by time series measurements of expression of individual genes throughout the cell cycle of the bacterium. SVD produces linearly orthogonal factors, each of which can represent an independent system behavior defined by a linear combination of the genes/proteins highly correlated with the corresponding factor. By using SVD of the developmental time series of gene expression, as measured by both protein and RNA levels, we show that on the highest level of control (representing the basic kinetic behavior of the population), the results are identical, regardless of the type of experiment or cultivation method. The results show that this approach is capable of identifying basic regulatory processes independent of the environment in which the organism lives. It also shows that these processes are manifested equally on protein and RNA levels. Biological interpretation of the correlation of the genes and proteins with significant eigenprofiles (representing the highest level kinetic behavior of protein and/or RNA synthesis) revealed their association with metabolic processes, stress responses, starvation, and secondary metabolite production.
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