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Cell-to-cell variability in organelle abundance reveals mechanisms of organelle biogenesis

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Choubey,  Sandeep
Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Max Planck Society;

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Choubey, S., Das, D., & Majumdar, S. (2019). Cell-to-cell variability in organelle abundance reveals mechanisms of organelle biogenesis. Physical Review E, 100(2): 022405. doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.100.022405.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0004-C7A3-3
Abstract
How cells regulate the number of organelles is a fundamental question in cell biology. While decades of experimental work have uncovered four fundamental processes that regulate organelle biogenesis, namely, de novo synthesis, fission, fusion, and decay, a comprehensive understanding of how these processes together control organelle abundance remains elusive. Recent fluorescence microscopy experiments allow for the counting of organelles at the single-cell level. These measurements provide information about the cell-to-cell variability in organelle abundance in addition to the mean level. Motivated by such measurements, we build upon a recent study and analyze a general stochastic model of organelle biogenesis. We compute the exact analytical expressions for the probability distribution of organelle numbers, their mean, and variance across a population of single cells. It is shown that different mechanisms of organelle biogenesis lead to distinct signatures in the distribution of organelle numbers which allow us to discriminate between these various mechanisms. By comparing our theory against published data for peroxisome abundance measurements in yeast, we show that a widely believed model of peroxisome biogenesis that involves de novo synthesis, fission, and decay is inadequate in explaining the data. Also, our theory predicts bimodality in certain limits of the model. Overall, the framework developed here can be harnessed to gain mechanistic insights into the process of organelle biogenesis.