Bauernfeind Amy L, Soderblom Erik J, Turner Meredith E, Moseley M Arthur, Ely John J, Hof Patrick R, Sherwood Chet C, Wray Gregory A, Babbitt Courtney C
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University Medical School Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis Department of Anthropology and Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology, The George Washington University
Proteomics and Metabolomics Shared Resource, Duke University School of Medicine Center for Genomic and Computational Biology, Duke University.
Genome Biol Evol. 2015 Jul 10;7(8):2276-88. doi: 10.1093/gbe/evv132.
Although transcriptomic profiling has become the standard approach for exploring molecular differences in the primate brain, very little is known about how the expression levels of gene transcripts relate to downstream protein abundance. Moreover, it is unknown whether the relationship changes depending on the brain region or species under investigation. We performed high-throughput transcriptomic (RNA-Seq) and proteomic (liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry) analyses on two regions of the human and chimpanzee brain: The anterior cingulate cortex and caudate nucleus. In both brain regions, we found a lower correlation between mRNA and protein expression levels in humans and chimpanzees than has been reported for other tissues and cell types, suggesting that the brain may engage extensive tissue-specific regulation affecting protein abundance. In both species, only a few categories of biological function exhibited strong correlations between mRNA and protein expression levels. These categories included oxidative metabolism and protein synthesis and modification, indicating that the expression levels of mRNA transcripts supporting these biological functions are more predictive of protein expression compared with other functional categories. More generally, however, the two measures of molecular expression provided strikingly divergent perspectives into differential expression between human and chimpanzee brains: mRNA comparisons revealed significant differences in neuronal communication, ion transport, and regulatory processes, whereas protein comparisons indicated differences in perception and cognition, metabolic processes, and organization of the cytoskeleton. Our results highlight the importance of examining protein expression in evolutionary analyses and call for a more thorough understanding of tissue-specific protein expression levels.
尽管转录组分析已成为探索灵长类动物大脑分子差异的标准方法,但对于基因转录本的表达水平如何与下游蛋白质丰度相关,我们却知之甚少。此外,尚不清楚这种关系是否会因所研究的脑区或物种而异。我们对人类和黑猩猩大脑的两个区域:前扣带回皮质和尾状核进行了高通量转录组分析(RNA测序)和蛋白质组分析(液相色谱-串联质谱联用)。在这两个脑区中,我们发现人类和黑猩猩的mRNA与蛋白质表达水平之间的相关性低于其他组织和细胞类型的报道,这表明大脑可能参与了广泛的组织特异性调节,影响蛋白质丰度。在这两个物种中,只有少数几类生物学功能在mRNA和蛋白质表达水平之间表现出强相关性。这些类别包括氧化代谢以及蛋白质合成与修饰,这表明与其他功能类别相比,支持这些生物学功能的mRNA转录本的表达水平更能预测蛋白质表达。然而,更普遍的是,这两种分子表达测量方法为人类和黑猩猩大脑之间的差异表达提供了截然不同的观点:mRNA比较揭示了神经元通讯、离子运输和调节过程中的显著差异,而蛋白质比较则表明在感知与认知、代谢过程以及细胞骨架组织方面存在差异。我们的结果强调了在进化分析中检查蛋白质表达的重要性,并呼吁更全面地了解组织特异性蛋白质表达水平。