Abstract

Stochastic fluctuations in gene expression give rise to cell-to-cell variability in protein levels which can potentially cause variability in cellular phenotype. For TRAIL (TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand) variability manifests itself as dramatic differences in the time between ligand exposure and the sudden activation of the effector caspases that kill cells. However, the contribution of individual proteins to phenotypic variability has not been explored in detail. In this paper we use feature-based sensitivity analysis as a means to estimate the impact of variation in key apoptosis regulators on variability in the dynamics of cell death. We use Monte Carlo sampling from measured protein concentration distributions in combination with a previously validated ordinary differential equation model of apoptosis to simulate the dynamics of receptor-mediated apoptosis. We find that variation in the concentrations of some proteins matters much more than variation in others and that precisely which proteins matter depends both on the concentrations of other proteins and on whether correlations in protein levels are taken into account. A prediction from simulation that we confirm experimentally is that variability in fate is sensitive to even small increases in the levels of Bcl-2. We also show that sensitivity to Bcl-2 levels is itself sensitive to the levels of interacting proteins. The contextual dependency is implicit in the mathematical formulation of sensitivity, but our data show that it is also important for biologically relevant parameter values. Our work provides a conceptual and practical means to study and understand the impact of cell-to-cell variability in protein expression levels on cell fate using deterministic models and sampling from parameter distributions.

Highlights

  • Variability in the responses of tumor cells to biological stimuli is often ascribed to genetic differences

  • Feature-based sensitivity analysis of cell death dynamics Cell death is represented in EARM by caspase-mediated proteolysis of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) to generate cleaved PARP: previous studies have shown that HeLa cells are inviable when cPARP exceeds,10% of initial PARP levels ([cPARP].0.10*[PARP]0) [23]

  • In this paper we examine the impact of naturally occurring variability in protein levels on variability in TNF-related apoptosis inducing ligand (TRAIL)-induced apoptosis

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Summary

Introduction

Variability in the responses of tumor cells to biological stimuli is often ascribed to genetic differences. Non-genetic variability at the single-cell level has been demonstrated in the activation of immune responses [1,2,3,4], viral infectivity [5,6,7], developmental fate [8,9,10,11], antibiotic resistance [12], and sensitivity to therapeutic drugs [13,14,15]. With either intrinsic or extrinsic noise, phenotypes vary from one cell to the but the processes that cause cells to differ are either part of or external to the biological process under study

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