Resolving noise–control conflict by gene duplication

Chapal, Michal and Mintzer, Sefi and Brodsky, Sagie and Carmi, Miri and Barkai, Naama and Hurst, Laurence D. (2019) Resolving noise–control conflict by gene duplication. PLOS Biology, 17 (11). e3000289. ISSN 1545-7885

[thumbnail of file (3).pdf] Text
file (3).pdf - Published Version

Download (3MB)

Abstract

Gene duplication promotes adaptive evolution in two main ways: allowing one duplicate to evolve a new function and splitting ancestral functions between the duplicates. The second scenario may resolve adaptive conflicts that can rise when one gene performs different functions. In an apparent departure from both scenarios, low-expressing transcription factor (TF) duplicates commonly bind to the same DNA motifs and act in overlapping conditions. To examine for possible benefits of this apparent redundancy, we examined the Msn2 and Msn4 duplicates in budding yeast. We show that Msn2,4 function as one unit by inducing the same set of target genes in overlapping conditions. Yet, the two-factor composition allows this unit’s expression to be both environmentally responsive and with low noise, resolving an adaptive conflict that limits expression of single genes. We propose that duplication can provide adaptive benefit through cooperation rather than functional divergence, allowing two-factor dynamics with beneficial properties that cannot be achieved by a single gene.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Open Research Librarians > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@open.researchlibrarians.com
Date Deposited: 08 Feb 2023 09:26
Last Modified: 01 Jan 2024 12:56
URI: http://stm.e4journal.com/id/eprint/40

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item