AI Article Synopsis

  • Cell size is carefully regulated in healthy tissues, yet its effect on physiology is not fully understood.
  • Recent research has shown that larger and smaller cells of the same type can have different protein compositions, influenced by their ploidy (number of chromosome sets).
  • The study reveals that as cells grow larger, the dilution of their genome impacts proteome composition, leading to a starvation-like effect and explaining some changes related to yeast aging.

Article Abstract

Cell size is tightly controlled in healthy tissues and single-celled organisms, but it remains unclear how cell size influences physiology. Increasing cell size was recently shown to remodel the proteomes of cultured human cells, demonstrating that large and small cells of the same type can be compositionally different. In the present study, we utilize the natural heterogeneity of hepatocyte ploidy and yeast genetics to establish that the ploidy-to-cell size ratio is a highly conserved determinant of proteome composition. In both mammalian and yeast cells, genome dilution by cell growth elicits a starvation-like phenotype, suggesting that growth in large cells is restricted by genome concentration in a manner that mimics a limiting nutrient. Moreover, genome dilution explains some proteomic changes ascribed to yeast aging. Overall, our data indicate that genome concentration drives changes in cell composition independently of external environmental cues.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41594-024-01353-zDOI Listing

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