Abstract

We describe the first large scale analysis of gene translation that is based on a model that takes into account the physical and dynamical nature of this process. The Ribosomal Flow Model (RFM) predicts fundamental features of the translation process, including translation rates, protein abundance levels, ribosomal densities and the relation between all these variables, better than alternative (‘non-physical’) approaches. In addition, we show that the RFM can be used for accurate inference of various other quantities including genes' initiation rates and translation costs. These quantities could not be inferred by previous predictors. We find that increasing the number of available ribosomes (or equivalently the initiation rate) increases the genomic translation rate and the mean ribosome density only up to a certain point, beyond which both saturate. Strikingly, assuming that the translation system is tuned to work at the pre-saturation point maximizes the predictive power of the model with respect to experimental data. This result suggests that in all organisms that were analyzed (from bacteria to Human), the global initiation rate is optimized to attain the pre-saturation point. The fact that similar results were not observed for heterologous genes indicates that this feature is under selection. Remarkably, the gap between the performance of the RFM and alternative predictors is strikingly large in the case of heterologous genes, testifying to the model's promising biotechnological value in predicting the abundance of heterologous proteins before expressing them in the desired host.

Highlights

  • Gene translation is a complex process through which an mRNA sequence is decoded by the ribosome to produce a specific protein

  • We introduce a new approach for modeling the process of translation elongation

  • We demonstrate that in comparison to commonly used approaches, our approach gives more accurate predictions of translation rates, protein abundance levels and ribosome densities across many species

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Summary

Introduction

Gene translation is a complex process through which an mRNA sequence is decoded by the ribosome to produce a specific protein. In recent years there has been a sharp growth in the number of new technologies for measuring different features related to the process of gene translation [5,6,10,14,15,16,17,18,19]. This process is still enigmatic, with contradicting conclusions in different studies. The models that have been used for this purpose, while making promising and worthy first strides, have not attempted to capture the nature of the translation elongation process on all its various physical aspects [6,13,26,27,28,29,30]

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