Precision in protein production: requirements and mechanism

ORAL  · Invited

Abstract

Cells possess specific compositions of proteins that define their physiology. I will discuss our research that is focused on elucidating the physiological requirements and mechanistic basis of the precise rates of protein production. Using bacterial model systems, we develop quantitative approaches to measure, manipulate, and model how co-transcribed genes produce distinct proportions of proteins, as well as how imbalanced production affects cell fitness. Our ultimate goal is to establish predictive frameworks to derive quantitative protein expression levels and their effects on bacterial growth physiology from operon sequences.

*This research was supported by NIH grant R35GM124732, the NSF CAREER Award, the Smith Odyssey Award, the Pew Biomedical Scholars Program, a Sloan Research Fellowship, the Searle Scholars Program, the Smith Family Award for Excellence in Biomedical Research, NSF graduate research fellowships, NIH Pre-Doctoral Training Grant T32 GM007287, an NSERC graduate fellowship, and an HHMI International Student Fellowship.

Presenters

  • Gene-Wei Li

    • MIT

Authors

  • Gene-Wei Li

    • MIT