CeRNA crosstalk stabilizes protein expression and affects the correlation pattern of interacting proteins

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Abstract

Gene expression is a noisy process and several mechanisms, both transcriptional and post-transcriptional, can stabilize protein levels in cells. Much work has focused on the role of miRNAs, showing in particular that miRNA-mediated regulation can buffer expression noise for lowly expressed genes. Here, using in silico simulations and mathematical modeling, we demonstrate that miRNAs can exert a much broader influence on protein levels by orchestrating competition-induced crosstalk between mRNAs. Most notably, we find that miRNA-mediated cross-talk (i) can stabilize protein levels across the full range of gene expression rates, and (ii) modifies the correlation pattern of co-regulated interacting proteins, changing the sign of correlations from negative to positive. The latter feature may constitute a potentially robust signature of the existence of RNA crosstalk induced by endogenous competition for miRNAs in standard cellular conditions.

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Martirosyan, A., De Martino, A., Pagnani, A., & Marinari, E. (2017). CeRNA crosstalk stabilizes protein expression and affects the correlation pattern of interacting proteins. Scientific Reports, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep43673

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