PLoS One | |
A Gene's Ability to Buffer Variation Is Predicted by Its Fitness Contribution and Genetic Interactions | |
Guang-Zhong Wang1  Martin J. Lercher1  Hong-Yu Zhang2  Wei Wang3  Jian Liu3  | |
[1] Institute for Computer Science, Heinrich-Heine-University, Düsseldorf, Germany;Institute of Bioinformatics and State Key Laboratory of Crop Genetic Improvement, College of Life Science and Technology, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan, P. R. China;Shandong Provincial Research Center for Bioinformatic Engineering and Technique, Center for Advanced Study, Shandong University of Technology, Zibo, P. R. China | |
关键词: Phenotypes; Capacitors; Protein-protein interactions; Genetic polymorphism; Protein interaction networks; Genetic interactions; Protein expression; Gene expression; | |
DOI : 10.1371/journal.pone.0017650 | |
学科分类:医学(综合) | |
来源: Public Library of Science | |
【 摘 要 】
Background Many single-gene knockouts result in increased phenotypic (e.g., morphological) variability among the mutant's offspring. This has been interpreted as an intrinsic ability of genes to buffer genetic and environmental variation. A phenotypic capacitor is a gene that appears to mask phenotypic variation: when knocked out, the offspring shows more variability than the wild type. Theory predicts that this phenotypic potential should be correlated with a gene's knockout fitness and its number of negative genetic interactions. Based on experimentally measured phenotypic capacity, it was suggested that knockout fitness was unimportant, but that phenotypic capacitors tend to be hubs in genetic and physical interaction networks. Methodology/Principal Findings We re-analyse the available experimental data in a combined model, which includes knockout fitness and network parameters as well as expression level and protein length as predictors of phenotypic potential. Contrary to previous conclusions, we find that the strongest predictor is in fact haploid knockout fitness (responsible for 9% of the variation in phenotypic potential), with an additional contribution from the genetic interaction network (5%); once these two factors are taken into account, protein-protein interactions do not make any additional contribution to the variation in phenotypic potential. Conclusions/Significance We conclude that phenotypic potential is not a mysterious “emergent” property of cellular networks. Instead, it is very simply determined by the overall fitness reduction of the organism (which in its compromised state can no longer compensate for multiple factors that contribute to phenotypic variation), and by the number (and presumably nature) of genetic interactions of the knocked-out gene. In this light, Hsp90, the prototypical phenotypic capacitor, may not be representative: typical phenotypic capacitors are not direct “buffers” of variation, but are simply genes encoding central cellular functions.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
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