Abstract

Translation is a central step in gene expression, however its quantitative and time-resolved regulation is poorly understood. We developed a discrete, stochastic model for protein translation in S. cerevisiae in a whole-transcriptome, single-cell context. A base case scenario representing an average cell highlights translation initiation rates as the main co-translational regulatory parameters. Codon usage bias emerges as a secondary regulatory mechanism through ribosome stalling. Demand for anticodons with low abundancy is shown to cause above-average ribosome dwelling times. Codon usage bias correlates strongly both with protein synthesis rates and elongation rates. Applying the model to a time-resolved transcriptome estimated by combining data from FISH and RNA-Seq experiments, it could be shown that increased total transcript abundance during the cell cycle decreases translation efficiency at single transcript level. Translation efficiency grouped by gene function shows highest values for ribosomal and glycolytic genes. Ribosomal proteins peak in S phase while glycolytic proteins rank highest in later cell cycle phases.

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