Abstract

BackgroundProtein secretion is one of the most important processes in eukaryotes. It is based on a highly complex machinery involving numerous proteins in several cellular compartments. The elucidation of the cell biology of the secretory machinery is of great importance, as it drives protein expression for biopharmaceutical industry, a 140 billion USD global market. However, the complexity of secretory process is difficult to describe using a simple reductionist approach, and therefore a promising avenue is to employ the tools of systems biology.ResultsOn the basis of manual curation of the literature on the yeast, human, and mouse secretory pathway, we have compiled a comprehensive catalogue of characterized proteins with functional annotation and their interconnectivity. Thus we have established the most elaborate reconstruction (RECON) of the functional secretion pathway network to date, counting 801 different components in mouse. By employing our mouse RECON to the CHO-K1 genome in a comparative genomic approach, we could reconstruct the protein secretory pathway of CHO cells counting 764 CHO components. This RECON furthermore facilitated the development of three alternative methods to study protein secretion through graphical visualizations of omics data. We have demonstrated the use of these methods to identify potential new and known targets for engineering improved growth and IgG production, as well as the general observation that CHO cells seem to have less strict transcriptional regulation of protein secretion than healthy mouse cells.ConclusionsThe RECON of the secretory pathway represents a strong tool for interpretation of data related to protein secretion as illustrated with transcriptomic data of Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells, the main platform for mammalian protein production.

Highlights

  • Protein secretion is one of the most important processes in eukaryotes

  • The RECON of the secretory pathway represents a strong tool for interpretation of data related to protein secretion as illustrated with transcriptomic data of Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells, the main platform for mammalian protein production

  • In order to achieve as holistic a view of protein secretion as possible, we included 75 genes that in literature have been tentatively associated with the secretory machinery

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Protein secretion is one of the most important processes in eukaryotes It is based on a highly complex machinery involving numerous proteins in several cellular compartments. Huntington’s, Alzheimer’s, or Parkinson’s disease, and protein specific misfolding can lead to cystic fibrosis and antitrypsin deficiency [42, 48] Such a highly complex process is difficult to describe using a reductionist approach, and a promising avenue is to employ the tools of systems biology. A useful tool is a network reconstruction – a compilation of a list of the known components in a specific area of cell biology and the interaction of said components Such network reconstructions (RECONs) have helped to analyse complex cellular pathways and networks related to metabolism, transcriptional regulation, protein-protein interactions (PPI), and genetic interactions among others [6]. As RECONs allow the analysis of geneor protein-level data in their biological context, they become tools for hypothesis-driven biological discovery [34]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call