3.8 Article

Genetic dissection of the pluripotent proteome through multi-omics data integration

Journal

CELL GENOMICS
Volume 3, Issue 4, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.xgen.2023.100283

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This study comprehensively analyzed the proteome of genetically diverse mESC lines and found significant variability in protein abundance. It identified pluripotency-associated pathways that were not evident in transcriptome data from the same lines. Integration of protein abundance with transcript levels and chromatin accessibility revealed co-variation across molecular layers and identified drivers of quantitative variation in pluripotency-associated pathways.
Genetic background drives phenotypic variability in pluripotent stem cells (PSCs). Most studies to date have used transcript abundance as the primary molecular readout of cell state in PSCs. We performed a compre-hensive proteogenomics analysis of 190 genetically diverse mouse embryonic stem cell (mESC) lines. The quantitative proteome is highly variable across lines, and we identified pluripotency-associated pathways that were differentially activated in the proteomics data that were not evident in transcriptome data from the same lines. Integration of protein abundance to transcript levels and chromatin accessibility revealed broad co-variation across molecular layers as well as shared and unique drivers of quantitative variation in pluripotency-associated pathways. Quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping localized the drivers of these multi-omic signatures to genomic hotspots. This study reveals post-transcriptional mechanisms and genetic interactions that underlie quantitative variability in the pluripotent proteome and provides a regulatory map for mESCs that can provide a basis for future mechanistic studies.

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