| Literature DB >> 24675767 |
Diana Andrea Fernandes de Abreu1, Antonio Caballero1, Pascal Fardel2, Nicholas Stroustrup3, Zhunan Chen4, Kyunghwa Lee5, William D Keyes5, Zachary M Nash3, Isaac F López-Moyado3, Federico Vaggi6, Astrid Cornils7, Martin Regenass7, Anca Neagu2, Ivan Ostojic7, Chang Liu1, Yongmin Cho8, Deniz Sifoglu9, Yu Shen4, Walter Fontana3, Hang Lu8, Attila Csikasz-Nagy10, Coleen T Murphy5, Adam Antebi11, Eric Blanc1, Javier Apfeld3, Yun Zhang4, Joy Alcedo12, Queelim Ch'ng1.
Abstract
Insulin-like peptides (ILPs) play highly conserved roles in development and physiology. Most animal genomes encode multiple ILPs. Here we identify mechanisms for how the forty Caenorhabditis elegans ILPs coordinate diverse processes, including development, reproduction, longevity and several specific stress responses. Our systematic studies identify an ILP-based combinatorial code for these phenotypes characterized by substantial functional specificity and diversity rather than global redundancy. Notably, we show that ILPs regulate each other transcriptionally, uncovering an ILP-to-ILP regulatory network that underlies the combinatorial phenotypic coding by the ILP family. Extensive analyses of genetic interactions among ILPs reveal how their signals are integrated. A combined analysis of these functional and regulatory ILP interactions identifies local genetic circuits that act in parallel and interact by crosstalk, feedback and compensation. This organization provides emergent mechanisms for phenotypic specificity and graded regulation for the combinatorial phenotypic coding we observe. Our findings also provide insights into how large hormonal networks regulate diverse traits.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24675767 PMCID: PMC3967928 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1004225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Figure 1Phenotypes of ILP mutants.
(A) Heat map summarizing the confidence and direction of each phenotype for 35 ILP mutants (indicated in the legend, bottom left). “P” labels previously published results that we analyzed together with this dataset [66]. Phenotypes were aligned to a tree of the 40 C. elegans ILPs based on protein sequence similarity (left); structural class (Pierce et al., 2001) and chromosomal organization (right). (B–I) indicate the magnitude of each phenotype compared to same-trial controls. (B) dauer entry; (C) dauer entry in the daf-2(e1368) background; (D) dauer entry in the daf-28(sa191) background; (E) dauer exit in the daf-2(e1368) background; (F) lifespan; (G) thermotolerance; (H) pathogen resistance; and (I) reproductive span. Bars in (B–I) were colored as indicated in the legend (bottom right). Y-axes in (B–D) indicate percentage of dauers normalized to same trial controls. Y-axes in (E–I) indicate mean durations of dauer exit (E), lifespan (F), survival at 34.5°C (G), survival on PA14 (H), and reproductive span (I), normalized to same-trial controls.
Figure 2The ILP regulatory network.
(A) Heat map summarizing the significance and direction of expression changes for all ILP mRNAs in 36 ILP mutants represented by negative log of the p-values. Significant differences (q<0.05) and transcripts with low expression were colored as indicated in the legend; more significant changes are more darkly shaded. Transcripts corresponding to deleted ILPs were excluded because these changes were not due to regulation (see Table S5 for mRNA changes). (B) Gene expression network based on a spring-embedded layout. Node sizes reflect the magnitude of betweenness centrality. Green and violet lines indicate excitatory and inhibitory connections, respectively. (C) A scatter plot of inputs versus outputs for each ILP. Pleiotropy signifies the percentage of phenotypes affected by each ILP; dauer entry phenotypes were aggregated for this purpose (see Materials and Methods and Figure 1). Dashed lines indicate the median for each axis. (D) Rank order of the ILPs for betweenness centrality. (E) Scatter plot showing linear correlation of betweenness centrality with pleiotropy.
Figure 3Functional maps of the ILP network.
Phenotypes of the ILPs were mapped onto a spring-embedded layout of the ILP network; directions of phenotypes are indicated in the legend (bottom right). (A) shows the network where ILPs with phenotypes are highlighted based on their phenotypic direction compared to daf-2 mutants. ILPs with both similar and opposite phenotypes to daf-2 are indicated with a split circle. (B–J) shows the network highlighted for phenotypes as indicated.
Figure 4Genetic interactions between ILPs.
(A) Double mutant analysis for dauer entry. Bars represent the phenotypes of single and double mutants (legend at bottom right); the class of genetic interaction is colored in the bar for the double mutant. (*) and (†) indicate significant difference with the column and row mutant, respectively (p<0.05, hypergeometric test). (B) Heat map and a pie chart summarizing the different genetic interactions based on dauer entry phenotypes of single and double mutants. Percentages in the pie chart do not add up to 100% due to rounding errors.
Figure 5Information flow in the dauer entry sub-network.
(A) shows the putative organizational structure of the dauer entry sub-network comprised of dauer entry-regulating ILPs compared to their genetic interactions (B, C). Genetic interactions classified as additive or synergistic (B); or non-additive, suppression or non-synergistic (C). (D) Shows the ratio of dauer formation of the triple mutant ins-33; daf-28 ins-35 compared to double or single mutant strains. ins-33; daf-28 and ins-33; daf-28 ins-35 mutants are significantly more likely to enter dauer than all other strains (p<0.001, Hypergeometric test).