Contributions of low molecule number and chromosomal positioning to stochastic gene expression
Top Cited Papers
- 7 August 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Genetics
- Vol. 37 (9), 937-944
- https://doi.org/10.1038/ng1616
Abstract
The presence of low-copy-number regulators and switch-like signal propagation in regulatory networks are expected to increase noise in cellular processes. We developed a noise amplifier that detects fluctuations in the level of low-abundance mRNAs in yeast. The observed fluctuations are not due to the low number of molecules expressed from a gene per se but originate in the random, rare events of gene activation. The frequency of these events and the correlation between stochastic expressions of genes in a single cell depend on the positioning of the genes along the chromosomes. Transcriptional regulators produced by such random expression propagate noise to their target genes.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Concepts in nuclear architectureBioEssays, 2005
- Efficient Attenuation of Stochasticity in Gene Expression Through Post-transcriptional ControlJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- Control of Stochasticity in Eukaryotic Gene ExpressionScience, 2004
- Cycling without the Cyclosome: Modeling a Yeast Strain Lacking the APCCell Cycle, 2004
- Spatial proximity of translocation-prone gene loci in human lymphomasNature Genetics, 2003
- Noise in eukaryotic gene expressionNature, 2003
- Conserved homeodomain proteins interact with MADS box protein Mcm1 to restrict ECB-dependent transcription to the M/G1 phase of the cell cycleGenes & Development, 2002
- Transcript Abundance in Yeast Varies over Six Orders of MagnitudeJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
- Perturbation of Nuclear Architecture by Long-Distance Chromosome InteractionsCell, 1996
- Markovian Modeling of Gene-Product SynthesisTheoretical Population Biology, 1995