Enhancer Runaway and the Evolution of Diploid Gene Expression
With the advent of new sequencing technologies, the evolution of gene expression regulation is becoming a subject of intensive research. In this paper, we report an entirely new phenomenon acting on the evolution of gene regulatory sequences. We show that in a small genomic region around genes there is a selection pressure to increase expression, such that stronger enhancers are favored. This leads to an open-ended escalation of enhancer strength. This outcome is not a particular case and we expect it to occur for all genes in nearly all eukaryotic diploid organisms. We also show that this escalation is not stopped by stabilizing selection on expression profiles. Indeed, regulators may coevolve to maintain optimal phenotypes despite the enhancer strength escalation. This widespread phenomenon can significantly shift our understanding of gene regulatory regions and opens a wide array of possible tests.
Published in the journal:
Enhancer Runaway and the Evolution of Diploid Gene Expression. PLoS Genet 11(11): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1005665
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005665
Summary
With the advent of new sequencing technologies, the evolution of gene expression regulation is becoming a subject of intensive research. In this paper, we report an entirely new phenomenon acting on the evolution of gene regulatory sequences. We show that in a small genomic region around genes there is a selection pressure to increase expression, such that stronger enhancers are favored. This leads to an open-ended escalation of enhancer strength. This outcome is not a particular case and we expect it to occur for all genes in nearly all eukaryotic diploid organisms. We also show that this escalation is not stopped by stabilizing selection on expression profiles. Indeed, regulators may coevolve to maintain optimal phenotypes despite the enhancer strength escalation. This widespread phenomenon can significantly shift our understanding of gene regulatory regions and opens a wide array of possible tests.
Introduction
The evolution of gene expression has become a subject of intensive research in the last years, sparking debates upon its role in adaptive evolution and speciation [1–6]. Clearly, protein folding, expression levels, timing and tissue localization of expression are important regulatory traits under selection as they are essential steps in the genotype-to-phenotype map.
Gene expression is regulated at each step along the pathway from DNA to protein. Among them, transcription initiation is a crucial step responsible for a large proportion of the variation in expression profiles. Here we will focus on regulatory regions controlling this transcription initiation. Changes in gene expression are often caused by mutations in cis-regulatory elements (CREs) and trans-regulatory elements (TREs) [7]. Cis and trans-regulators control transcription of genes located on the same chromosome, or on both homologous chromosomes, respectively. Several recent technological breakthroughs [7–10] have considerably improved our ability to study these regulatory sequences and their associated expression profiles. They revealed that gene expression profiles were highly variable and heritable within species [2,11,12], quickly diverging among species [8]. Furthermore, many studies have shown how changes in gene expression contribute to adaptive changes, by natural selection at the individual level [4,6,13–17]. From a theoretical standpoint, several models have also been developed to understand the evolution of gene expression by individual level selection [18–22].
In this paper we investigate a new and different selective phenomenon also acting on the evolution of regions controlling transcription initiation. This phenomenon may contribute to the fast divergence of regulatory networks between closely-related species, but unlike the usual view, it is not rooted in individual-level selection, and hence does not necessarily increase individual fitness. We term this selective process ‘ER‘ (for ‘enhancer runaway’). It results from competition for expression between homologous cis-acting regulatory sequences in diploid organisms. With this gene-level selection, these regulatory sequences behave as self-promoting genetic elements.
Transcription initiation is determined by the binding of a suitable RNA-polymerase to a Transcription Start Site (TSS). This binding involves a complex machinery of often over 30 partner proteins [23]. It depends on the interaction of CREs and TREs. CREs are non-coding sequences located on the same chromosome as the regulated gene. They include core promoters located around the TSS, which integrates the regulatory inputs [24]. They also include enhancers, which influence transcription initiation rate independently from their orientation or localization on this chromosome [9]. TREs are coding sequences, located anywhere in the genome, that produce transcription factors (TFs), which bind to CREs on both homologs. They can also produce cofactors, which bind other proteins (including other TREs) [7].
In order to show how the ER process works, we use population genetic models with both protein-coding sequences (the ‘gene(s)’) and regulatory sequences (enhancers or transcription factors). For generality, we do not specify precisely how regulatory mutations change regulatory networks. We simply assume that mutations occur in enhancers and TFs, which impact expression levels. Indeed, there are many ways for an enhancer mutation to modify expression levels [2,7,9,25,26]. It may change for instance the binding site affinity towards TFs, the number and/or spacing between binding sites, or the nucleosome conformation around the enhancer region, which strongly impacts DNA accessibility for the transcriptional machinery. Because enhancers act in cis, the presence of different alleles at the enhancer locus creates a pattern of allele-specific expression (imbalance in chromosomal origin of transcripts) for the protein-coding gene [27,28]. Indeed, in heterozygous individuals, the ‘weaker’ enhancer contributes less to protein expression than its ‘stronger’ counterpart on the other chromosome, causing imbalanced expression of homologous gene alleles. TF mutations may also alter expression levels in various ways. For instance, they can change its DNA-binding domain (modifying its affinity for different binding sites) or its protein-protein binding domain (modifying its interactions with e.g. cofactors or histones). However, they act in trans, and do not generate allele-specific expression.
To obtain a good understanding and broad evaluation of the significance of the ER process, we investigate several complementary models. In a first model, we study the ER process in the absence of individual level selection for expression level. We then incorporate individual level selection on expression. Many form of individual level selection on expression levels could have been chosen, and there has been indeed much debate over the different selection pressures acting on expression levels. While some argue that regulatory polymorphism is mainly neutral or quasi-neutral [29,30], others suggest that regulatory evolution is mostly shaped by stabilizing selection [31–33] and occasionally by directional selection [8,34–36]. In a second and third model, we thus chose to introduce stabilizing selection on expression levels (due to a relative gene dosage constraint in model 2, or an absolute expression constraint in model 3). In these two models, other regulatory regions can evolve in concert (other enhancers in model 2, TFs in model 3). Finally, since the ER process may act very differently in genomes exhibiting inbreeding and low heterozygosity, we investigate how it is influenced by the mode of reproduction (inbreeding in model 4). Overall we show that, in a small genomic region around genes, there is a selection pressure on enhancer to increase expression levels. This phenomenon leads to an open-ended escalation in enhancer strength (a ‘runaway’). This process is not halted by inbreeding, or by stabilizing selection on expression levels, as long as enhancers can evolve in concert with other regulatory sequences (enhancers or TFs) involved in the same regulatory network. Enhancer runaway is not a highly specific or idiosyncratic process: it is expected to occur at variable intensities for all genes in nearly all eukaryotic diploid organisms. This widespread phenomenon may significantly shift our current understanding of gene regulatory regions, and opens a wide array of possible tests and comparisons.
Model
Competition for expression
To illustrate how competition for expression works, we first present a two-locus model in an infinite, diploid, sexual population. The first locus, the ‘gene’, codes for a protein. We suppose that it undergoes recurrent deleterious mutations (with fitness effect s and dominance h) at a rate u, but the argument would apply equally well with beneficial mutations (see methods). This locus quickly reaches the usual deterministic mutation–selection equilibrium, with deleterious mutation at frequency u/hs. The second locus, the ‘enhancer’, is located at a recombination distance r and controls the expression of the gene in a cis-regulatory fashion. We wish to determine the selection pressure acting on mutations that modify the strength of this enhancer.
In model 1, we consider that the overall expression level is tightly controlled, for instance because of trans-acting regulatory factors producing a negative feedback loop. Such a feedback loop is not relevant to all genes, but is a particularly useful starting case. It allows investigating how the ER process works without the complication of additional selection pressures acting, at the individual level, on protein expression. We thus assume that overall expression levels are constant (due to the feedback loop), such that only the relative contributions of each homologous alleles vary due to mutations on enhancers.
Labelling e1 and e2 the strengths of the two enhancer alleles of an individual, the gene associated with enhancer of strength e1 contributes a fraction e1/(e1+e2) of proteins produced. As a consequence, the gene allele linked to a stronger enhancer contributes a larger share of proteins.
In double heterozygotes, if the deleterious allele of the gene is linked to the weaker enhancer, less than 50% of the proteins produced will be of the defective form, and thus its effect on fitness will be less than predicted based on its dominance coefficient h (which in effect reduces its dominance to h1<h). In contrast, if it is linked to the stronger enhancer, its deleterious effect on fitness will be stronger than predicted by h (which in effect increases its dominance to h2>h). The fitness effect of linkage with a specific enhancer can thus be modeled as a change in h that occurs only when the enhancer is heterozygote, while dominance is necessarily h as long as an enhancer allele is fixed, as illustrated in Fig 1.
Because deleterious mutations are usually partially recessive [37], the relationship between the fraction of defective proteins and fitness is necessarily nonlinear, monotonously decreasing and concave (Fig 2). Thus, we have h1 + h2 > 2h (applying Jensen’s Inequality to the strictly concave fitness function). In other words, a polymorphism at the enhancer locus necessarily increases average dominance (the mean of h1 and h2 is greater than h), which increases the strength of selection against heterozygous deleterious mutations, but also reduces the fitness of individuals carrying these mutations.
The deterministic change in frequency at the enhancer locus can be computed from standard population genetics equations, considering a generic diploid life cycle with four steps: diploid selection, meiosis with recombination, mutation and syngamy. This frequency change can be decomposed into two terms that correspond to ‘masking’ and ‘purging’, as introduced in previous related models [38,39] (see derivation in methods). The ‘masking’ term does not depend on recombination, and is frequency-dependent. It always disfavors the enhancer allele when rare, independently of its strength. The reason is that a rare enhancer will most often be represented in double heterozygotes (since deleterious mutations often are rare too), which have lower average fitness, since they have higher average dominance (this is similar to Fisher’s argument for the evolution of lower dominance [40]). In other words, rare enhancer alleles pay the cost of unmasking deleterious alleles. This term is strongly conservative, as it prevents any new enhancer to enter the population. The ‘purging’ term, in contrast, is frequency-independent, always favors stronger enhancers, and increases when recombination between the enhancer locus and the gene decreases. The reason is that genes that are linked with stronger enhancers are more exposed to selection and more efficiently purged from deleterious mutations. Hence, stronger enhancers are disproportionately found on –and hitchhike with– favorable genetic backgrounds. Overall, combining these two effects, weaker mutant enhancers are always disfavored, while stronger mutant enhancers are favored if sufficiently tightly linked to the gene for the ‘purging’ effect to overcome the ‘masking’ effect. The recombination distance where the two effects balance each other depends however on the strength difference of the two enhancer alleles. For enhancers that are very similar in strength, the range of recombination distances where the runaway can occur is larger, but the intensity of selection on the stronger enhancer is weaker (S1 Fig). This is due to the fact that, for small differences in enhancer strength, Δh becomes vanishingly small compared to δh (and thus the masking term in front of the purging term, see Eqs 3 and 5 in methods). Overall, stronger runaway is expected close to genes because selection intensity on new enhancers is stronger at small recombination distances and because the runaway only concerns enhancers of small effects at larger recombination distance.
In regulatory regions close to the gene, selection thus favors enhancers contributing more to protein production: homolog enhancers compete for expression. This outcome is illustrated on Fig 3, where this analysis is checked against –and agrees with– stochastic numerical simulations reporting the fixation probabilities of new enhancers in finite populations.
This finding indicates that stronger and stronger cis-regulatory elements should evolve in an open-ended fashion in the vicinity of genes, as long as that does not influence the total amount of proteins produced. Competition for expression may thus be responsible for a runaway process of enhancer strength. During this process, allele-specific expression would transiently occur, but expression balance would be restored once the new enhancer reaches fixation. This process shares many similarities with the endless occurrence and spread of new segregation distorters that transiently bias Mendelian ratio while they sweep [41]. It also shares similarities with models of Fisher runaway in the context of sexual selection, where female mating preference drives the open-ended evolution of extravagant traits in males [42].
Interestingly, the spread of such stronger enhancers occurs even though it temporarily decreases population mean fitness (see methods). Indeed, stronger enhancers spread because they find themselves on better backgrounds, but at the expense of temporarily increasing mean dominance and hence unmasking deleterious mutations. Overall the ER process does not optimize mean individual fitness in the population.
Competition for expression and stabilizing selection on expression levels
Gene expression regulation is not necessarily embedded in a negative regulatory loop, as considered above. Mutations on enhancers will often alter overall expression levels. When this occurs, stabilizing selection on overall gene expression will interfere with competition for expression. We developed two additional models (model 2 and 3) with such interactions (see methods). In these models, mutations on enhancers alter both relative contribution to expression, e1/(e1+e2), and total expression levels, e1+e2. We assume that total expression levels undergo stabilizing selection with different intensities that reflect the functional diversity of genes (over- or under-expression may be more costly for some genes than others).
In model 2, we assume that stabilizing selection on expression levels stems from gene dosage, such that the optimal amount of a given protein depends on the amounts of another protein coming from another loci, as occurs for instance in enzymatic or metabolic pathways. This produces the strongest constraint on enhancer strength evolution when only two proteins are concerned (see methods). In this case, any increase in the expression of gene 1 causes a departure from optimal dosage for gene 2, which reduces fitness. Results show that such stabilizing selection fails to prevent enhancer strengths from escalating. This is because enhancers of both genes coevolve: their strengths increase in parallel, allowing maintenance of the correct protein dosage. However, stabilizing selection tends to decrease escalation rates (longer doubling times on Fig 4, see methods). Strength-increasing mutations of large effects are indeed counter-selected, since they lead to large deleterious departures from optimal gene dosage. However, strength-increasing mutations of small effects lead only to small enough departures from optimal gene dosage for the genotype to survive until optimal gene dosage is restored by compensatory mutations. Stabilizing selection needs to be relatively strong (stronger than the selection at the gene locus) for it to significantly alter escalation rates.
In model 3, we considered a situation where stabilizing selection acts directly on the absolute expression levels of a gene, but transcription factors influence expression levels as well as enhancers. We designed a three-locus model with a gene, an enhancer locus, and a TF locus, where both the strength of the enhancer and TF combine to determine expression levels (see methods). Here again, as shown on Fig 4, stabilizing selection slows down but does not stop the ER process, due to coevolution between regulators (here, enhancers and TFs). As enhancer strength increases, TF strength decreases in proportion, which maintains approximately constant and optimal total expression levels. In this model, escalation rates are systematically lower than the ones obtained with model 2 (except for I = 0). This is to be expected as two identical enhancer loci are exposed to the ER process in model 2, while only one enhancer is exposed to the ER process in model 3 (the TF locus only responds to stabilizing selection). As a consequence, in model 3, stabilizing selection importantly decrease escalation rates at lower intensities (lower than the intensity of selection at the gene locus).
Impact of mating system on competition for expression
Variation in enhancer strength only makes a phenotypic difference in double heterozygotes. In situations where such heterozygotes are less frequent than under random mating, the pace of the ER process is expected to be slower. Inbreeding is a typical and common situation decreasing heterozygote frequency. It may be caused by various processes (e.g. selfing in hermaphroditic plants or animals, population structure). To determine whether ER indeed differs among species exhibiting e.g. different mating systems, and to quantify the extent of this reduction, we introduced partial selfing in the first model.
In model 4, at each generation, individuals were considered to have probability ps of selfing (i.e. with probability ps, the same parent is used to sample the second gamete). As expected the ER process slowed down as selfing rate increased. Fig 5 illustrates this behavior. Results show that relatively high levels of self-fertilization are needed for the ER process to be significantly slowed down.
Discussion
The ER process we describe sheds a new light on the evolution of gene regulatory regions in diploids. It should be a widespread phenomenon, applicable to all genes in diploid eukaryotes as the theory only involves generic assumptions (recessivity of deleterious mutations [37], genetic variation at enhancer loci [43], CREs—TREs coevolution [44], stabilizing selection on expression levels [31–33]). This process has been acting probably since early unicellular diploids, more than a billion years ago, before the evolution of complex combinatorial or developmental regulatory pathways. As we already stressed in the introduction, it does not undermine the idea that expression regulation is also subject in contemporary eukaryotes to other important selective effects (direct selection for expression level, timing and localization).
Before discussing the implications and predictions associated with this theory, it is useful to relate it to previous models involving variation in dominance, ploidy, mutation load and selection for modifiers. It shares with models of ploidy evolution the fact that increased haploid expression leads to more efficient purging of deleterious mutations, which benefits tightly linked modifiers [38,39]. It shares with models of dominance evolution [45–48] the limit that selection on modifiers is weak, of the order of the mutation rate (even if this issue may be alleviated if migration is the source of deleterious alleles [48,49]). Such a weak selection is usually seen as a limit in the case of dominance evolution because genetic drift in small populations or small pleiotropic effects of modifiers should easily overwhelm the selection pressure for dominance modification [50]. A distinctive feature of our theory is that the ER process is not strongly limited by such pleiotropic effects: as we showed, direct selection against suboptimal expression levels can be readily compensated by CREs-CREs or CREs-TREs coevolution, without halting the ER process. A critical difference with previous models is that dominance does not evolve: the dominance of deleterious mutations is h before the sweep of a stronger enhancer, and is still h after its fixation. Similarly, ploidy or the number of gene copies stays constant and does not evolve (with the consequence that, unlike in models involving gene duplicates or ploidy variation, the mutational load is not permanently changed by a change in gene number [38,47]). In our models, selection is frequency-dependent at leading order and leads to a runaway escalation not seen in models of ploidy or dominance evolution. Our models specifically focus on cis- or trans-acting modifiers, mimicking the actual genetic variation occurring on regulatory regions. Cis-regulation introduces naturally an asymmetry in the fitness of the two double heterozygotes (EA/ea and Ea/eA), which is also not a feature present in models of ploidy or dominance evolution.
This theory leads to a series of predictions that can be further tested. We highlight eight of them below using capital letters A-H. The ER process should occur for almost all genes in diploids, but with different, and possibly very different rates depending on their specific evolutionary constraints (regulatory loops, dosage relationships, intensity of stabilizing selection). For instance, as we illustrated with our first model, this runaway is fastest for enhancers that are embedded in a downstream negative regulatory loop (prediction A). Such negative feedback loops have been extensively described and are often thought to largely contribute to phenotypic robustness (e.g. [51–53]). This runaway should be slower for genes that are not regulated with such loops and exposed to direct stabilizing selection on relative or absolute expression levels. The pace of the ER process depends in those cases on the form and intensity of the stabilizing selection, as well as on the opportunities for CREs and TREs to coevolve to maintain optimal total expression levels, which may differ among genes.
Our results show a strong impact of the recombination rate between the enhancer and the gene on the ER process (see Fig 3). There are two regimes: (1) for large recombination rates, the ER process does not occur (large and medium effect enhancers are selected against and small effect enhancers are nearly neutral), while (2) at shorter genetic distances, the runaway occurs and its rate increases as the recombination rate decreases. Everything else being equal, the ER process should cause a positive correlation between enhancers’ strength and their proximity to the gene, but it should not concern enhancers located at large genetic distances (prediction B). This prediction would be consistent with the observation that most CREs remain close to the gene they regulate [54]. The critical genetic distance delimiting the two ER regimes increases as the intensity of selection on the gene increases. As a result, genes undergoing stronger purifying selection would be expected to have a larger surrounding region where enhancers increasing expression may arise and compete for expression. Consequently, we predict that genes experiencing stronger purifying selection should exhibit a larger surrounding regulatory region, and that, for a given genetic distance to such genes, enhancers should exhibit a faster ER process (prediction C). Such qualitative predictions may be altered if there is an inherent physical tendency for CREs strength to covary with physical map distance. However, if, as is most likely, CRE strength decreases with physical distance along the chromosome, the qualitative pattern will remain identical (since decreased CRE strength and increased recombination both prevent the fixation of new enhancers).
There are several reasons, not included in our models, why the ER process could slow down or stop. First, many mutations on enhancers are likely to have pleiotropic effects on timing or localization of expression. These features are not included in our model, and probably limit the availability of enhancer mutations that can contribute to the ER process in higher eukaryotes. Second, mutations may not be able to increase enhancer strength indefinitely. For instance, when a binding motif sequence is optimized for a particular TF, there may be little room for further improvement. Similarly, there is a limit to the number of binding motifs that can be packed in a regulatory region, etc. These constraints could be revealed by studying the effect of random mutations on regulatory regions. If enhancer strength is maximized by the ER process, no (or very few) random mutations on the enhancer will be able to increase its strength, such that the strength of those enhancers should be biased downward by random mutations. Conversely, if a TF has evolved to compensate for the enhancer runaway (i.e. by increasingly repressing transcription), random mutations on this TF should on average increase expression levels (prediction D).
The evolution of regulatory networks’ complexity is not well understood and controversial (some argue that the evolution of complex regulatory networks stem from adaptive processes [18,20,55], while others consider a non-adaptive origin [56,57]). We saw that the ER process depends on the shape of regulatory networks (e.g. presence of feedback loops, of gene dosage etc.). It may also be facilitated with more complex regulatory architecture, as highly degenerate and complex regulatory architectures [58] could provide more ‘degrees of freedom’ for CREs—TREs (co)evolution. Interestingly, the ER process may also contribute to the evolution of complex regulatory networks. For instance, an increase of enhancer strength may be achieved e.g. by locally duplicating TF binding motifs (and hence increasing the complexity of regulatory architecture). The duplicated motifs may further diverge to attract a larger diversity of TFs if this happens to be a route to further increase of enhancers’ strength: combinatorial regulation (where expression specifity results from a particular combination of several TFs, as in e. g. [59]) may thus evolve from the ER process. A positive feedback loop may thus occur between the ER process and the evolution of regulatory complexity. Much of these effects will rely on the contingency of mutational variation on enhancers, but can produce a level of architecture complexity much beyond the level expected under individual selection alone. Species where the ER process is expected to be faster (e.g. outcrossing vs. selfing diploids, diploid versus haploid eukaryotes) should exhibit more complex regulatory architectures (prediction E). Like for other theories for the evolution of complexity [56,57], complexity would emerge here as a by-product of another process (here ER) and is not a direct target of selection.
It is generally envisioned that many regulatory networks can be functionally equivalent. For instance, many CREs—TREs combinations can perform the same signaling, and different global regulatory wirings among TREs and CREs can achieve the same regulatory pattern. Like with a key / lock or signal / receiver mechanisms, the central functional requirement is the reciprocal recognition of interacting regulatory elements. Such a situation produces a fitness landscape with a ridge, along which ‘evolutionary freedom’ allows for substantial neutral divergence [60]. This process is often thought to drive relatively fast divergence of regulatory networks among species without modifying expression patterns much [61]. In our models, the same process occurs (coevolution between regulators occurs without modifying much expression levels), but, in addition, selection for stronger proximal CREs leads to faster-than neutral divergence (prediction F). Using again the fitness landscape metaphor, it means that the ridge is actually not flat, but is slightly sloping: evolution between networks with the same expression pattern is not neutral, but rather directed to favor networks involving stronger proximal enhancers. Moreover, this faster-than-neutral divergence is expected to be accentuated for CREs (compared to TREs, prediction G). Indeed, the ER process necessarily involves CREs, and optionally TREs. For instance, cis- cis- coevolution illustrated in model 2 does not involve TREs evolution. This may partly explain why CREs are usually (but not always, e.g. [62]) found to contribute more than TREs to expression regulation divergence among species (e.g. in Saccharomyces [63], Drosophila [64], Gasterosteus [16] and Mus [65]).
As shown in model 4, the ER process is slower in presence of inbreeding. In particular, the ER process is expected to be faster in outcrossing than in self-fertilizing species (prediction H). One way to test for this prediction would be to compare CRE strengths in hybrids between closely related outcrossing and self-fertilizing species. Indeed, in the hybrid, expression level differences between alleles can only be explained by CRE variation, as TREs from both parents are shared [66]. Such method could be used in e.g. Arabidopsis [67] or Capsella [68]. The expectation would be that CREs derived from the self-fertilizing species should be weaker on average, biasing expression pattern in F1s towards the outcrossing parent alleles. Such test would require however to control for the direction of the cross (distinguishing the species effect from maternal versus paternal effects).
Several genetic oddities that have been observed in some species may greatly limit the ER process. For example, in somatic cells of Diptera, homolog chromosomes pair and expression is largely influenced by a phenomenon referred to as ‘transvection’ [69]. With transvection, “CREs” impact regulation of both homolog chromosomes (i.e. are not really behaving as cis-regulatory elements as they also regulate in trans). Somatic pairing and transvection in these taxa certainly reduce, or even eliminate competition for expression. Similarly, repulsion of homologs, as found in mammals’ nucleus [70], (i.e. the fact that the chromosome territories of homologs tend to be further apart within the nucleus compared to a random pair of chromosomes) could also strongly reduce competition for transcription factors between competing CREs, as the transcription of homologs likely involves different and spatially segregated ‘transcription factories’ [71]. In both cases, reduced competition for expression between homologs could strongly limit the ER process. Finally some recombination hotspots are located close to genes in several species [72,73]. This could also strongly limit the ER process by breaking linkage disequilibria between CREs and genes. Whether some of these genetic oddities evolved as suppressors of the ER process is an intriguing possibility, especially given that their evolutionary significance remains elusive.
Methods
We describe below the models (1–4) we designed to infer enhancer strength evolution. These models differ by the mode of reproduction and the type of stabilizing selection acting throughout gene regulatory networks. In model 1, we study the evolution of enhancers assuming that expression levels are so tightly controlled that the total amount of proteins is strictly constant. There is no selective pressure resulting from changes in overall protein expression. In such a situation, a competition for expression appears between homolog enhancers. We used this model to understand the genetic cause of the resulting ER process and the evolutionary patterns it creates. While this model is relevant for genes with regulatory loops (and for understanding selection pressure acting on expression balance), it may not capture all selection pressures acting on enhancers. Thus, in following models (2 and 3), we consider that enhancers do influence the total amount of protein expressed and investigate how it interacts with the selection pressure described in model 1. We consider two cases. In model 2, there is an optimal dosage between expression levels of different genes: enhancer strength variation on one gene causes a departure on gene expression dosage, which is deleterious. In model 3, the fitness penalty arises from any departure from an absolute optimal expression level, but expression levels depend on enhancers and transcription factors, and not only on enhancers as in previous models. Finally in model 4, we introduce partial selfing in a model 1 genetic setup, to infer the effects of inbreeding on the ER process.
Designing model 1
We firstly consider a diploid two-locus model: the first locus, referred to as ‘the gene’ is a protein-coding locus undergoing mutations and diploid viability selection; the second one, referred to as ‘the enhancer’, is a CRE locus controlling the expression of the gene. The gene is exposed to recurrent deleterious mutations, at a rate u per individual per generation, changing A alleles into a alleles. In the analytical derivation below, we focus on this bi-allelic case, but this assumption is relaxed later for numerical simulations. We define the relative fitness of genotypes as 1, 1 –h s and 1 –s for AA, Aa and aa genotypes, respectively, where s is the selection coefficient against the a allele and h its dominance. The enhancer is at a recombination distance r from the gene. We consider two alleles (E1 / E2), which differ by their ability to promote expression of the gene located in cis (i.e. on the same chromosome). This ability is referred to as their ‘strength’ and noted e1 and e2. Biologically this strength depends on many parameters, such as sequence affinity, chromatin state, binding network or intracellular signals [7]. Furthermore, different mechanistic models have been put forward to describe enhancer effects: they are thought to change either promoter activation levels or the probability that a promoter will be activated to initiate transcription [74]. Here, we will not assume a particular mechanism but cover all these possibilities by simply supposing that enhancer sequences intrinsically differ by their ability to activate gene transcription.
We assume that the gene on the same chromosome than an enhancer with strength e1, facing on the homolog chromosome an enhancer with strength e2, contributes to a fraction e1/(e1 + e2) of protein produced (see Fig 1). As a consequence, the gene associated with a stronger enhancer contributes a larger share of proteins. A major feature of this first model is that the total protein expression level is tightly regulated: the total amount of protein produced is assumed to be constant, and does not depend on enhancers’ strength (6 proteins are always produced on Fig 1). Such a situation would occur, for instance, when the amount of transcription factors, or a repressor is regulated through a negative feedback loop (e.g. through the total amount of protein produced or by the concentration of a downstream metabolite resulting from protein activity). Besides representing this fairly common biological situation, this model is also important to understand the evolution of enhancer strength independently from the selection pressure acting on the amount of protein in a given cell at a given time.
When the gene locus is homozygous, the fitness of individuals does not depend on the enhancer alleles, as 100% of the proteins are of the same type (the fitness is 1 or 1 –s for AA and aa genotypes respectively). However, different situations arise in individuals that are heterozygous at the gene locus. When they are homozygous at the enhancer locus, they equally express each type of proteins (50% each), and their fitness is 1 –h s (genotypes (a) and (d) in Fig 1). When they are heterozygous at the enhancer locus they express more (or less) of the defective protein if the stronger (or weaker) enhancer is associated with the deleterious allele (genotypes (b) and (c) in Fig 1). This changes dominance at the gene locus. When fewer defective proteins are produced, the deleterious effect will be lower, which means lower dominance, noted h1 such that h1 < h (genotype (c) in Fig 1). Conversely, if more defective proteins are produced, the deleterious effect will be larger, which means a higher dominance, noted h2 such that h2 > h (genotype (b) in Fig 1). The values of h1 and h2 will depend on the strengths e1 and e2 of E1 and E2 alleles. In order to be more specific about this relationship, we note that phenotype-to-fitness relationship must verify two major properties: (1) the fitness must decrease as the proportion of deleterious proteins expressed increases and (2) the relationship between the fitness and the proportion of defective proteins expressed must be concave, as deleterious mutations are most often partially recessive [37], which means that fitness effects of deleterious mutations are lower than what would be expected in an additive (linear) situation. As a consequence, the relationship between fitness and the fraction of defective proteins expressed must be similar to the situation illustrated on Fig 2. A generic way to formulate these properties is to express fitness as a function of f[a], the fraction of defective proteins, h and s with a concave monotonic power function:
which conveniently converges to the additive situation for h = 1/2. With such a relationship, and assuming that e2 > e1, we have:
Noting Δh = (h1+h2)/2 –h, one can use Jensen’s Inequality on the strictly concave fitness function to show that Δh > 0. The commonly accepted assumption that deleterious mutations are partially recessive (i.e. h is on average around 0.25 for mildly deleterious mutations, [37]) leads in our model to the outcome that polymorphism at the enhancer locus increases the mean dominance.
Derivation of mutant enhancer frequency change over one generation
To study the evolution of enhancer strength, we are first looking for the frequency variation of the stronger E2 enhancer allele after one generation (noted as Δp). To do so, a four-step life cycle is implemented, with diploid selection, meiosis, mutation and syngamy. The exact recursion is then linearized to leading orders, defining a parameter ξ << 1 and assuming (1) weak selection on the gene (h s is of order ξ), (2) very small mutation rate (u is of order ξ2) and (3) small recombination rate r between enhancer and gene loci (of order ξ). Under those fairly generic assumptions, the frequency of the deleterious allele a (noted pa) is small (of order ξ) and the linkage disequilibrium (DEA) between the enhancer and the gene is small (of order ξ). DEA is defined as positive when E2A and E1a haplotypes are over-represented (meaning that DEA is positive when stronger enhancers are associated with beneficial alleles). We obtain, noting p the frequency of E2 and q the frequency of E1, the leading order of the frequency variation of E2:
The first term Eq (3a) corresponds to a direct selection on enhancers while the second term Eq (3b) is an indirect selection proportional to DEA.
The direct selection is negative when E2 is rare (since Δh > 0) and positive when it is frequent. Thus, it favors the most common allele at the enhancer locus. To understand this effect, it is useful to derive the mutation-selection equilibrium of pa, paEq. Using the same linearizing assumptions than for Δp, assuming that the mutant stronger enhancer has just entered the population (thus neglecting DEA) and noting δh = h2−h1, one obtains:
where h¯=h+2 Δh p q is the average dominance in the population. Note that the polymorphism at the enhancer locus increases average dominance (since Δh > 0), which reduces the frequency of deleterious mutations. The direct selection term (3.a) actually stems from this effect on average dominance: fixation at the enhancer locus is similar to reducing average dominance, which is favorable. Like in models for the evolution of ploidy [38,39], direct selection favors the masking of deleterious mutations, but here this effect is frequency-dependent. We refer to this term as the ‘masking’ term.
The indirect selection is relatively straightforward since the expression within brackets in (3.b) can be shown to be always positive. That means that indirect selection has the same sign than DEA: it is positive when the stronger enhancer (E2) is preferentially associated with beneficial gene alleles (DEA > 0 in this situation). The question turns now to determine the sign of DEA. To do so, we use a quasi-linkage equilibrium (QLE) approximation that requires that the forces causing frequency changes are weak relative to recombination rate [75]. This approximation usually breaks down at low recombination rates. However, because we are at mutation selection balance for the gene, and because the frequency change at the enhancer locus is small, an accurate approximation can be obtained by linearizing under the same assumptions as above, and keeping terms in both rDEA and sDEA [76]. We obtain DEAQLE:
Note that this quasi-linkage equilibrium value does not diverge for small recombination rate. Noting that Δh is at most half as large as δh, it is straightforward to show that DEAQLE>0, indicating that the indirect selection term is positive and favors stronger enhancers. This effect stems from the fact that E2 carrying chromosomes are more exposed to selection because of their increased average expression. They are thus purged more efficiently from deleterious mutations: as a consequence E2 alleles are most often found on, and hitchhike with, beneficial genetic background (they are associated to A alleles), which is beneficial for E2 alleles. We refer to this term as the ‘purging’ term.
The same model can be made with beneficial instead of deleterious mutations. In this case, we cannot assume that pa << 1, since a alleles sweep to fixation. As a consequence the expression of Δp, involves more terms depending on pa. However, Δp can still be partitioned into a ‘masking’ and a ‘purging’ term like in Eq 3a and Eq 3b, respectively. Provided that beneficial mutations are dominant, and for any pa value, the ‘masking’ term still favors the most frequent alleles, whereas the ‘purging’ term still favors stronger enhancers. Qualitatively, the model with beneficial dominant mutations and the model with deleterious recessive mutations give similar results concerning enhancer alleles’ frequency dynamics. Considering partially dominant deleterious mutations would lead to a moderately different outcome (the term 3.a will switch sign, causing more enhancer polymorphism), but this scenario is biologically much less relevant.
Decrease of mean fitness
When a stronger enhancer spreads, it is favored by the purging term, but at the cost of unmasking deleterious mutations. Mean fitness equals 1–2u when there is no variation at the enhancer locus (p = 0 or p = 1). However, during the spread of an enhancer, mean fitness W¯ decreases as can be readily seen from:
which is negative around p < ½ and positive around p > ½. This is due to the fact that deleterious mutations are unmasked when average dominance increases, before they have time to reach their lower mutation—selection equilibrium frequency. A temporary genetic burden appears: deleterious mutations are too frequent given their new mean dominance.
Numerical calculation of mutant enhancer fixation probability
Because the selection coefficient on a new enhancer allele is frequency dependent (3.a), it is useful to obtain a more integrated measure of selection on enhancer alleles. One solution is to compute their probability of fixation U (which accounts for all frequency trajectories) and compare it to a neutral expectation. We computed it, for a mutant enhancer initially at frequency p0, using a diffusion approximation [77]:
As the numerical integration calculated from Eq 7 relies on some assumptions, we use numerical simulations of mutant enhancer fixation or loss in a finite population to check the corresponding results. Fig 3 illustrates ratio of the probability of fixation of new enhancer alleles relative to 1/2Npop, the probability of fixation of a neutral allele. Numerical simulations were performed using a C++-program of an individual-based stochastic version of the model described above. There are Npop individuals in the population. Each individual has two loci, enhancer and gene, with two alleles each. Alleles at the enhancer locus are encoded by a real value representing enhancer strength. Alleles at the gene locus carry either the wild-type allele or a deleterious allele of fitness effect s. The fitness of the diploid genotype is given by w1—hi (w1—w2), were hi is the dominance in this individual, which can vary depending on the genotype at the enhancer locus (following Eq 2) and where w1 is the fitness of the fittest of the two alleles (w2 the fitness of the other allele). At generation 0, all individuals are homozygote for the same enhancer allele and the wild-type gene allele. Then, 2000 generations of the life cycle (diploid selection, meiosis with recombination, mutation and syngamy) are performed. During these generations, there is no mutation on the enhancer locus. At each generation, the number of mutations on the gene is sampled in a Poisson Distribution with expectation 2Npopu A corresponding number of alleles (sampled randomly in the population) is then assigned to be deleterious. We then generate the population of Npop individuals at the next generation, accounting for selection, meiosis and random mating. For each individual in the next generation, we first determine its two parents. Two individuals of the current generation are sampled randomly. When chosen, each candidate is accepted with a probability equal to its fitness, or resampled. Once the two parents are identified, we sample one gamete in each of them (recombination occurring at a rate r between the two loci). After the 2000 generations, the deleterious allele frequency is close to the mutation-selection balance u/hs. A chromosome is then randomly chosen in the whole population and we assign it a new enhancer allele differing in strength. The new enhancer allele is then monitored until fixation or loss. Fixation probabilities were computed from 10000 runs of such simulations for each set of parameter values. The results presented on Fig 3 in the main text are obtained dividing those probabilities of fixation by that of a neutral enhancer in the same conditions (i.e. a mutant enhancer allele having the same strength than the resident allele).
Results showed on Fig 3 were obtained using the following parameters values: (1) dominance coefficient h = 0.25, (2) gene mutation rate u = 10−3, (3) population size Npop = 103, (4) selection coefficients s = 0.1 or 0.01 and (5) enhancer mutant strength three times larger or smaller than the resident allele. The 0.25 value of dominance is the most biologically plausible value for deleterious mutations [78]. Results illustrated are valid for other combination of u and Npop provided Npopu = 1. In other situations, the results would be magnified about 1 by a factor Npopu. For instance in a very large population Npop = 108 with weaker gene mutation rate u = 10−5, we have Npopu = 103, so that tightly linked stronger enhancers would be ∼2.103 more likely to fix than a neutral allele (instead of ∼2 more likely as illustrated on Fig 3 for Npopu = 1). Fig 6 illustrates this behavior, where the fixation probability of stronger enhancers, relative to the neutral expectation, scales linearly with Npopu.
Numerical simulations of enhancer strength evolution
A simplifying assumption of the model described above is to consider a population with only two enhancer alleles. We also designed an infinite-allele version of the model to check the robustness of the conclusions and to study long-term enhancer strength evolution. The goal here is to study the evolution of the mean strength of a population of enhancers undergoing recurrent unbiased mutations. In order to be consistent, we also considered the gene locus as an infinite-allele locus undergoing recurrent deleterious mutations of various effects. The simulations performed on this model are designed as the fixation probability simulations with an individual-based stochastic model, except that we do not study fixation probabilities but long-term trait evolution. At each new generation, the number of mutations on the enhancer locus is drawn from a Poisson distribution with mean 2NpopuE, uE being the mutation rate on the enhancer locus per individual per generation. We denote zi = Log(ei), the logarithm of enhancer strength of allele i. We consider that mutations alter the trait zi such that after mutation it becomes zi + ε, where ε is a normal deviate ε∼N(0,σE2). We considered additive mutational effect on the logarithm of enhancer strength, in order to avoid that the mutational variance vanishes on mean enhancer strength when trait value increases. Indeed, in the model, only relative enhancer strength matters in the competition for expression. As a consequence, if mean enhancer strength increases in the long run, a constant mutational variance on the trait (not its Log) would tend to produce less and less differences between enhancers such that relative enhancer strength ratios will eventually tend to 1. Mutation as described above avoids this artifact and also ensures that enhancer strength always remains positive. To model mutations on the gene, the number of mutation events is drawn for each generation from a Poisson distribution with mean 2NpopuA, uA being the mutation rate on the gene locus per individual per generation. For each mutation event, the fitness effect of the new mutant allele is drawn from a negative exponential distribution with mean s.
In order to measure the rate of the ER process, we follow the population mean of z through time. This mean increases linearly with time and we use the slope of this linear increase to compute the mean doubling time (i.e. the time needed for mean enhancer strength to double). To obtain the mean doubling time, we first store at regular time points z1(i,j,t) and z2(i,j,t), the logarithms of the strengths of both enhancers of individual i at generation t during iteration j (simulations are repeated 100 times). For each generation sampled, we calculate mean z over the whole population and over the different iterations:
As z¯ increase linearly with time, we estimate its rate of increase using a linear regression. Doubling times T×2 is computed as:
where a is the slope of this regression. Results of this model are illustrated on Fig 4 (red curves) and were obtained using the following parameter values: (1) dominance coefficient h = 0.25, (2) mutation rates uA = uE = 10−3, (3) selection intensity s = 0.1, (4) recombination rate between the gene and its enhancer r = 10−6, (5) initial strength of enhancers e0 = 1, (6) population size Npop = 5000, (7) number of iteration Nit = 100, (8) number of generations Ngen = 100000. Note that this model is a special case of model 2 and 3 presented below.
Models including stabilizing selection on expression levels
Model 2: Stabilizing selection on relative expression levels among genes
Here we consider a model where, for example, the proteins are enzymes implied in bio-chemical chain reactions. In this case, the dosage relationship between enzymes plays a major role in the outcome of the reactions, and so potentially on the fitness of the individuals. In model 2, the absolute amount of proteins does not have any cost on fitness, but a departure from an optimum dosage between different proteins (produced from different loci) does. In reality, dosage relationships would probably involve several proteins, but we will consider only two for simplicity and because it probably corresponds to the maximum dosage constraint. With a larger sets of, say, n genes in dosage relationships, the increase in enhancer strength at a focal gene will alter its dosage relationships with n—1 genes. In principle, if each imbalanced gene pair contributes a cost then the overall cost should be larger for a larger set of genes. However, if, more plausibly, the set of co-regulated genes contribute to a specific biological function, then the fitness cost will be paid when this function is disrupted, but will not accumulate beyond this. Thus, it is robust to assume that the function will become more disrupted with a larger fraction of imbalanced gene pairs. Because this fraction equals 2/n, it is maximal for n = 2 (the number of imbalanced pairs is n-1 and the number of balanced pairs (n-1)(n-2)/2). Hence, as long as the fitness cost increases with the proportion of imbalanced genes pairs, the situation with only two genes is probably the most stringent. This model is designed similarly to model 1, but involves two major changes. First, we need two pairs of evolving enhancer/gene chromosomes to model the expression of the two types of proteins. We denote zij the log-strength of enhancer on chromosome i at locus j. We assume a recombination rate of r between the enhancers and the corresponding genes, and a recombination rate of 0.5 between the first gene and the second enhancer (which is equivalent to saying that there are two different chromosome pairs). Second, if we note W the fitness of an individual, WAj the fitness of each diploid enhancer/gene set defined as previously and WE a new fitness component taking into account the stabilizing selection on dosage relationship between the proteins, we have:
We denote Zj the sum of the logarithmic strengths of the two alleles at the enhancer locus j (Zj = z1j + z2j). We define WE as:
where I stands for the intensity of stabilizing selection on the dosage relationship. We apply stabilizing selection on Z to avoid any bias since mutations occur on z. Stabilizing selection favors an optimal phenotype where the two proteins are, for simplicity, equally produced. In order to biologically scale the intensity of stabilizing selection on expression (I) with the impact of deleterious mutations at the protein-coding loci, we introduce a scaling parameter γ. Considering that fitness reduction after one round of mutations on the gene is u h s, and that fitness reduction after one round of mutations on regulatory sequences is 1−e−I×4σE2, we compute I such that:
With this scaling, the cost of non-optimal expression of random mutations on enhancers is approximately γ time the cost of recurrent deleterious mutations on the gene. We run simulations for γ values of 0, 1, 5 and 10. Fig 4 illustrates these simulations with the same parameter values than for model 1.
Model 3: Stabilizing selection on absolute expression level on a focal gene
Here, we consider the second case where, contrary to model 1, enhancer polymorphism causes variation in expression levels. In this case, stabilizing selection acts directly on absolute expression levels. Any increase or decrease from the optimal amount of proteins is deleterious. In this situation, we also allow for trans-acting regulatory factors (referred to as transcription factors below, TFs) to evolve as well, as they may compensate for the evolution of stronger enhancers. In model 3, the absolute level of protein expression depends on the strengths of enhancers and TFs. The goal here is to investigate if enhancer strength evolution is limited by the constraint on absolute expression levels or if an open ended coevolution can take place between enhancers, whose strength tends to increase due to the ER process, and the TFs, for which we predict that they should coevolve such as to maintain optimal protein expression. For this model we designed simulations with three loci: the TF locus, the enhancer locus and the gene locus. TF locus is not localized on the same chromosome, i.e. it recombines freely with the two other loci, rTE = 0.5. It influences expression on the gene in trans, i.e. each allele at this locus interacts with the two homologous enhancer alleles. Following the same notation as previously, we note Z1 and Z2 the logarithmic strengths of enhancer and TF loci, respectively. Without loss of generality, we assume that optimal amount of proteins is produced when Z1 + Z2 = 0 (meaning that the overall strength of TFs exactly opposes the overall strength of enhancers):
The intensity of the stabilizing selection I is scaled as in the previous model. Like for the enhancer locus, the number of mutations on the TF locus is drawn from a Poisson distribution with mean 2NpopuT; and these mutations additively change the Log of the trait. Results on Fig 4 are presented in terms of doubling time as previously and were obtained with the same parameter values than before.
Effect of inbreeding on the ER process (model 4)
In model 4, we want to study modifications in escalation rates resulting from variation in the mating system. Here, we use the same assumptions than in model 1 except that each individual gets a probability ps to self-fertilize. Self-fertilization is modelled by sampling the second gamete from the same diploid parent than the first. Doubling times are calculated as previously and are reported on Fig 5.
Supporting Information
Zdroje
1. Hoekstra HE, Coyne JA (2007) The locus of evolution: evo devo and the genetics of adaptation. Evolution (N Y) 61: 995–1016.
2. Carroll SB (2008) Evo-Devo and an Expanding Evolutionary Synthesis: A Genetic Theory of Morphological Evolution. Cell 134: 25–36. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2008.06.030 18614008
3. King M, Wilson A (1975) Evolution at two levels in humans and chimpanzees. Science 188(80-) : 107–116.
4. Abzhanov A, Protas M, Grant BR, Grant PR, Tabin CJ (2004) Bmp4 and morphological variation of beaks in Darwin’s finches. Science 305: 1462–1465. 15353802
5. Wilson AC, Maxson LR, Sarich VM (1974) Two types of molecular evolution. Evidence from studies of interspecific hybridization. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 71: 2843–2847. 4212492
6. Cooper T (2003) Parallel changes in gene expression after 20,000 generations of evolution in Escherichia coli. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100: 1072–1077. 12538876
7. Wray GA, Hahn MW, Abouheif E, Balhoff JP, Pizer M, et al. (2003) The evolution of transcriptional regulation in eukaryotes. Mol Biol Evol 20: 1377–1419. 12777501
8. Fay JC, Wittkopp PJ (2008) Evaluating the role of natural selection in the evolution of gene regulation. Heredity (Edinb) 100: 191–199.
9. Wittkopp PJ, Kalay G (2012) Cis-regulatory elements: molecular mechanisms and evolutionary processes underlying divergence. Nat Rev Genet 13: 59–69.
10. Pastinen T, Hudson TJ (2004) Cis-acting regulatory variation in the human genome. Science 306: 647–650. 15499010
11. Cheung VG, Conlin LK, Weber TM, Arcaro M, Jen K-Y, et al. (2003) Natural variation in human gene expression assessed in lymphoblastoid cells. Nat Genet 33: 422–425. 12567189
12. Pickrell JK, Marioni JC, Pai AA, Degner JF, Engelhardt BE, et al. (2010) Understanding mechanisms underlying human gene expression variation with RNA sequencing. Nature 464: 768–772. doi: 10.1038/nature08872 20220758
13. Ferea TL, Botstein D, Brown PO, Rosenzweig RF (1999) Systematic changes in gene expression patterns following adaptive evolution in yeast. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96: 9721–9726. 10449761
14. Gompel N, Prud’homme B, Wittkopp PJ, Kassner VA, Carroll SB (2005) Chance caught on the wing: cis-regulatory evolution and the origin of pigment patterns in Drosophila. Nature 433: 481–487. 15690032
15. Raymond M, Chevillon C, Guillemaud T, Lenormand T, Pasteur N (1998) An overview of the evolution of overproduced esterases in the mosquito Culex pipiens. Philos Trans R Soc B Biol Sci 353: 1707–1711.
16. Shapiro MD, Marks ME, Peichel CL, Blackman BK, Nereng KS, et al. (2004) Genetic and developmental basis of evolutionary pelvic reduction in threespine sticklebacks. Nature 428: 717–723. 15085123
17. Wagner GP, Lynch VJ (2008) The gene regulatory logic of transcription factor evolution. Trends Ecol Evol 23: 377–385. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2008.03.006 18501470
18. Jenkins DJ, Stekel DJ (2010) De Novo Evolution of Complex, Global and Hierarchical Gene Regulatory Mechanisms. J Mol Evol 71: 128–140. doi: 10.1007/s00239-010-9369-4 20680619
19. Jenkins DJ, Stekel DJ (2009) A New Model for Investigating the Evolution of Transcription Control Networks. Artif Life 15: 259–291. doi: 10.1162/artl.2009.Stekel.006 19254178
20. Crombach A, Hogeweg P (2008) Evolution of Evolvability in Gene Regulatory Networks. PLoS Comput Biol 4: e1000112. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000112 18617989
21. Aldana M, Balleza E, Kauffman S, Resendiz O (2007) Robustness and evolvability in genetic regulatory networks. J Theor Biol 245: 433–448. 17188715
22. Quayle AP, Bullock S (2006) Modelling the evolution of genetic regulatory networks. J Theor Biol 238: 737–753. 16095624
23. Ptashne M, Gann A (1997) Transcriptional activation by recruitment. Nature 386: 569–577. 9121580
24. Spitz F, Furlong EEM (2012) Transcription factors: from enhancer binding to developmental control. Nat Rev Genet 13: 613–626. doi: 10.1038/nrg3207 22868264
25. Villar D, Flicek P, Odom DT (2014) Evolution of transcription factor binding in metazoans [mdash] mechanisms and functional implications. Nat Rev Genet 15: 221–233. doi: 10.1038/nrg3481 24590227
26. Rockman M V, Wray GA (2002) Abundant raw material for cis-regulatory evolution in humans. Mol Biol Evol 19: 1991–2004. 12411608
27. Knight JC (2004) Allele-specific gene expression uncovered. Trends Genet 20: 113–116. 15049300
28. Lo HS, Wang Z, Hu Y, Yang HH, Gere S, et al. (2003) Allelic variation in gene expression is common in the human genome. Genome Res 13: 1855–1862. 12902379
29. Whitehead A, Crawford DL (2006) Neutral and adaptive variation in gene expression. Proc Natl Acad Sci 103: 5425–5430. 16567645
30. Khaitovich P, Weiss G, Lachmann M, Hellmann I, Enard W, et al. (2004) A Neutral Model of Transcriptome Evolution. PLoS Biol 2: e132. 15138501
31. Denver DR, Morris K, Streelman JT, Kim SK, Lynch M, et al. (2005) The transcriptional consequences of mutation and natural selection in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nat Genet 37: 544–548. 15852004
32. Gilad Y, Oshlack A, Smyth GK, Speed TP, White KP (2006) Expression profiling in primates reveals a rapid evolution of human transcription factors. Nature 440: 242–245. 16525476
33. Ludwig MZ, Bergman C, Patel NH, Kreitman M (2000) Evidence for stabilizing selection in a eukaryotic enhancer element. Nature 403: 564–567. 10676967
34. Lemos B, Meiklejohn CD, Cáceres M, Hartl DL (2005) Rates of divergence in gene expression profiles of primates, mice, and flies: stabilizing selection and variability among functional categories. Evolution 59: 126–137. 15792233
35. Rifkin SA, Kim J, White KP (2003) Evolution of gene expression in the Drosophila melanogaster subgroup. Nat Genet 33: 138–144. 12548287
36. Whitehead A, Crawford DL (2006) Variation within and among species in gene expression: raw material for evolution. Mol Ecol 15: 1197–1211. 16626448
37. Manna F, Martin G, Lenormand T (2011) Fitness Landscapes: An Alternative Theory for the Dominance of Mutation. Genetics 189: 923–937. doi: 10.1534/genetics.111.132944 21890744
38. Otto SP, Goldstein DB (1992) Recombination and the evolution of diploidy. Genetics 131: 745–751. 1628815
39. Cailleau A, Cheptou P-O, Lenormand T (2010) Ploidy and the evolution of endosperm of flowering plants. Genetics 184: 439–453. doi: 10.1534/genetics.109.110833 19933875
40. Fisher RA (1931) The Evolution of Dominance. Biol Rev 6: 345–368.
41. Austin B, Trivers R, Burt A (2009) Genes in conflict: the biology of selfish genetic elements. Harvard University Press.
42. Kirkpatrick M (1982) Sexual selection and the evolution of female choice. Evolution (N Y): 1–12.
43. Cheung VG, Nayak RR, Wang IX, Elwyn S, Cousins SM, et al. (2010) Polymorphic Cis- and Trans-Regulation of Human Gene Expression. PLoS Biol 8: e1000480. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1000480 20856902
44. Kuo D, Licon K, Bandyopadhyay S, Chuang R, Luo C, et al. (2010) Coevolution within a transcriptional network by compensatory trans and cis mutations. Genome Res: 1–7.
45. Proulx SR, Phillips PC (2005) The Opportunity for Canalization and the Evolution of Genetic Networks. Am Nat 165: 147–162. 15729647
46. Wagner GP, Bürger R (1985) On the evolution of dominance modifiers II: a non-equilibrium approach to the evolution of genetic systems. J Theor Biol 113: 475–500. 3999784
47. Otto SP, Yong P (2002) The evolution of gene duplicates. Homol Eff 46: 451–483.
48. Otto SP, Bourguet D (1999) Balanced Polymorphisms and the Evolution of Dominance. Am Nat 153: 561–574.
49. Bourguet D (1999) The evolution of dominance. Heredity (Edinb) 83: 1–4.
50. Wright S (1929) Fisher’s Theory of Dominance. Am Nat 63: 274–279.
51. Masel J, Siegal ML (2009) Robustness: mechanisms and consequences. Trends Genet 25: 395–403. doi: 10.1016/j.tig.2009.07.005 19717203
52. Denby CM, Im JH, Yu RC, Pesce CG, Brem RB (2012) Negative feedback confers mutational robustness in yeast transcription factor regulation. Proc Natl Acad Sci 109: 3874–3878. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1116360109 22355134
53. Thieffry D, Huerta AM, Pérez-Rueda E, Collado-Vides J (1998) From specific gene regulation to genomic networks: a global analysis of transcriptional regulation in Escherichia coli. BioEssays 20: 433–440. 9670816
54. Dixon AL, Liang L, Moffatt MF, Chen W, Heath S, et al. (2007) A genome-wide association study of global gene expression. Nat Genet 39: 1202–1207. 17873877
55. Lenski RE, Ofria C, Pennock RT, Adami C (2003) The evolutionary origin of complex features. Nature 423: 139–144. 12736677
56. Lynch M (2007) The frailty of adaptive hypotheses for the origins of organismal complexity. Proc Natl Acad Sci 104: 8597–8604. 17494740
57. Soyer OS, Bonhoeffer S (2006) Evolution of complexity in signaling pathways. Proc Natl Acad Sci 103: 16337–16342. 17060629
58. Biggin MD (2014) Animal Transcription Networks as Highly Connected, Quantitative Continua. Dev Cell 21: 611–626.
59. Ochoa-Espinosa A, Yucel G, Kaplan L, Pare A, Pura N, et al. (2005) The role of binding site cluster strength in Bicoid-dependent patterning in Drosophila. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102: 4960–4965. 15793007
60. Lenormand T, Roze D, Rousset F (2015) Stochasticity in evolution. Trends Ecol Evol 24: 157–165.
61. Weirauch MT, Hughes TR (2010) Conserved expression without conserved regulatory sequence: the more things change, the more they stay the same. Trends Genet 26: 66–74. doi: 10.1016/j.tig.2009.12.002 20083321
62. Yvert G, Brem RB, Whittle J, Akey JM, Foss E, et al. (2003) Trans-acting regulatory variation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and the role of transcription factors. Nat Genet 35: 57–64.
63. Tirosh I, Reikhav S, Levy AA, Barkai N (2009) A yeast hybrid provides insight into the evolution of gene expression regulation. Science 324: 659–662. doi: 10.1126/science.1169766 19407207
64. Wittkopp PJ, Haerum BK, Clark AG (2008) Regulatory changes underlying expression differences within and between Drosophila species. Nat Genet 40: 346–350. doi: 10.1038/ng.77 18278046
65. Cowles CR, Hirschhorn JN, Altshuler D, Lander ES (2002) Detection of regulatory variation in mouse genes. Nat Genet 32: 432–437. 12410233
66. Wittkopp PJ, Haerum BK, Clark AG (2004) Evolutionary changes in cis and trans gene regulation. Nature 430: 85–88. 15229602
67. He F, Zhang X, Hu J, Turck F, Dong X, et al. (2012) Genome-wide Analysis of Cis-regulatory Divergence between Species in the Arabidopsis Genus. Mol Biol Evol 29: 3385–3395. doi: 10.1093/molbev/mss146 22641789
68. Steige KA, Reimegård J, Koenig D, Scofield DG, Slotte T (2015) Cis-Regulatory Changes Associated with a Recent Mating System Shift and Floral Adaptation in Capsella. Mol Biol Evol.
69. Mellert DJ, Truman JW (2012) Transvection Is Common Throughout the Drosophila Genome. Genetics 191: 1129–1141. doi: 10.1534/genetics.112.140475 22649078
70. Heride C, Ricoul M, Kiêu K, von Hase J, Guillemot V, et al. (2010) Distance between homologous chromosomes results from chromosome positioning constraints. J Cell Sci 123: 4063–4075. doi: 10.1242/jcs.066498 21084563
71. Rieder D, Trajanoski Z, McNally JG (2012) Transcription factories. Front Genet 3: 221. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2012.00221 23109938
72. Gerton JL, DeRisi J, Shroff R, Lichten M, Brown PO, et al. (2000) Global mapping of meiotic recombination hotspots and coldspots in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Proc Natl Acad Sci 97: 11383–11390. 11027339
73. Brick K, Smagulova F, Khil P, Camerini-Otero RD, Petukhova G V (2012) Genetic recombination is directed away from functional genomic elements in mice. Nature 485: 642–645. doi: 10.1038/nature11089 22660327
74. Sen R, Grosschedl R (2010) Memories of lost enhancers. Genes Dev 24: 973–979. doi: 10.1101/gad.1930610 20478992
75. Nagylaki T (1993) The evolution of multilocus systems under weak selection. Genetics 134: 627–647. 8325492
76. Roze D (2014) Selection for sex in finite populations. J Evol Biol 27: 1304–1322. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12344 24666571
77. Kimura M (1964) Diffusion Models in Population Genetics. J Appl Stat 1: 177–232.
78. Manna F, Gallet R, Martin G, Lenormand T (2012) The high-throughput yeast deletion fitness data and the theories of dominance. J Evol Biol 25: 892–903. doi: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2012.02483.x 22409241
Štítky
Genetika Reprodukčná medicínaČlánok vyšiel v časopise
PLOS Genetics
2015 Číslo 11
- Je „freeze-all“ pro všechny? Odborníci na fertilitu diskutovali na virtuálním summitu
- Gynekologové a odborníci na reprodukční medicínu se sejdou na prvním virtuálním summitu
Najčítanejšie v tomto čísle
- UFBP1, a Key Component of the Ufm1 Conjugation System, Is Essential for Ufmylation-Mediated Regulation of Erythroid Development
- Metabolomic Quantitative Trait Loci (mQTL) Mapping Implicates the Ubiquitin Proteasome System in Cardiovascular Disease Pathogenesis
- Ernst Rüdin’s Unpublished 1922-1925 Study “Inheritance of Manic-Depressive Insanity”: Genetic Research Findings Subordinated to Eugenic Ideology
- Genetic Interactions Implicating Postreplicative Repair in Okazaki Fragment Processing