Abstract

Genetically identical cell populations exhibit considerable intercellular variation in the level of a given protein or mRNA. Both intrinsic and extrinsic sources of noise drive this variability in gene expression. More specifically, extrinsic noise is the expression variability that arises from cell-to-cell differences in cell-specific factors such as enzyme levels, cell size and cell cycle stage. In contrast, intrinsic noise is the expression variability that is not accounted for by extrinsic noise, and typically arises from the inherent stochastic nature of biochemical processes. Two-color reporter experiments are employed to decompose expression variability into its intrinsic and extrinsic noise components. Analytical formulas for intrinsic and extrinsic noise are derived for a class of stochastic gene expression models, where variations in cell-specific factors cause fluctuations in model parameters, in particular, transcription and/or translation rate fluctuations. Assuming mRNA production occurs in random bursts, transcription rate is represented by either the burst frequency (how often the bursts occur) or the burst size (number of mRNAs produced in each burst). Our analysis shows that fluctuations in the transcription burst frequency enhance extrinsic noise but do not affect the intrinsic noise. On the contrary, fluctuations in the transcription burst size or mRNA translation rate dramatically increase both intrinsic and extrinsic noise components. Interestingly, simultaneous fluctuations in transcription and translation rates arising from randomness in ATP abundance can decrease intrinsic noise measured in a two-color reporter assay. Finally, we discuss how these formulas can be combined with single-cell gene expression data from two-color reporter experiments for estimating model parameters.

Highlights

  • Identical cell populations exposed to same extracellular environment exhibit considerable variability in gene expression [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Assuming mRNA production occurs in random bursts, transcription rate is represented by either the burst frequency or the burst size

  • We begin by introducing the standard stochastic gene expression model [44,45,46,47], where all model parameters are fixed, and expression variability arises due to the stochastic nature of transcription and translation processes

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Summary

Introduction

Identical cell populations exposed to same extracellular environment exhibit considerable variability in gene expression [1,2,3,4,5]. This variation in the level of a given protein is often referred to as gene expression noise. Analytical formulas for intrinsic and extrinsic noise are derived for a class of stochastic gene expression models with fluctuations in the transcription or translation rate. Simultaneous fluctuations in the transcription and translation rates decrease intrinsic noise in certain parameter regimes Usefulness of these formulas in interpreting two-color reporter experiments and estimating model parameters is discussed

Gene Expression with Constant Parameters
Transcription Burst Frequency Fluctuations
SmpT dt
SmzT dt SmTzkm
Using the fact that for a geometric distribution
Transcription Burst Size Fluctuations
Translation Rate Fluctuations
SpzT dt SpTzkp
Simultaneous Model Parameter Fluctuations
Transcription Burst Frequency and Translation Rate Fluctuations
Discussion
Which Mechanism Generates the Largest Gene Expression Noise?
Estimation of Model Parameters from Noise
Author Contributions
Full Text
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