Abstract

Protein turnover metabolism plays important roles in cell cycle progression, signal transduction, and differentiation. Those proteins with short half-lives are involved in various regulatory processes. To better understand the regulation of cell process, it is important to study the key sequence-derived factors affecting short-lived protein degradation. Until now, most of protein half-lives are still unknown due to the difficulties of traditional experimental methods in measuring protein half-lives in human cells. To investigate the molecular determinants that affect short-lived proteins, a computational method was proposed in this work to recognize short-lived proteins based on sequence-derived features in human cells. In this study, we have systematically analyzed many features that perhaps correlated with short-lived protein degradation. It is found that a large fraction of proteins with signal peptides and transmembrane regions in human cells are of short half-lives. We have constructed an SVM-based classifier to recognize short-lived proteins, due to the fact that short-lived proteins play pivotal roles in the control of various cellular processes. By employing the SVM model on human dataset, we achieved 80.8% average sensitivity and 79.8% average specificity, respectively, on ten testing dataset (TE1-TE10). We also obtained 89.9%, 99% and 83.9% of average accuracy on an independent validation datasets iTE1, iTE2 and iTE3 respectively. The approach proposed in this paper provides a valuable alternative for recognizing the short-lived proteins in human cells, and is more accurate than the traditional N-end rule. Furthermore, the web server SProtP (http://reprod.njmu.edu.cn/sprotp) has been developed and is freely available for users.

Highlights

  • Proteins are the chief actors within the cell

  • Some cytosolic enzymes have half-lives as short as 10 minutes, whereas others last for days. The fluctuations in their expression are fundamental for metabolism, cell cycle control and communication between a cell and environment

  • The rapid removal of rate-limiting enzymes and regulatory proteins is essential for the control of growth and metabolism

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Summary

Introduction

All proteins in mammal cells are continually being degraded and replaced. Some cytosolic enzymes have half-lives as short as 10 minutes, whereas others last for days. The fluctuations in their expression are fundamental for metabolism, cell cycle control and communication between a cell and environment. The cell’s proteolytic machinery must be highly selective and tightly regulated, since the accelerated destruction of an essential protein or the failure to degrade a short-lived regulatory protein could drastically alter cell function [1]. The continual destruction of cell proteins may appear to be wasteful, but it serves several important homeostatic functions [2]. The rapid removal of rate-limiting enzymes and regulatory proteins is essential for the control of growth and metabolism. If p53 was stabilized in response to an activating signal, such as DNA damage, its expression level will rise rapidly and inhibit cell growth

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