| Literature DB >> 27887564 |
Adam J Dobson1,2, John M Chaston1,3, Angela E Douglas4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Resident microorganisms (microbiota) have far-reaching effects on the biology of their animal hosts, with major consequences for the host's health and fitness. A full understanding of microbiota-dependent gene regulation requires analysis of the overall architecture of the host transcriptome, by identifying suites of genes that are expressed synchronously. In this study, we investigated the impact of the microbiota on gene coexpression in Drosophila.Entities:
Keywords: Coexpression; Drosophila; Gene regulation; Microbiota; Symbiosis; Transcriptional network
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27887564 PMCID: PMC5124311 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-016-3307-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1The microbiota changes transcriptional network structure in specific modules. a The heatmap shows the structure of pairwise gene-gene correlations amongst the Drosophila lines. Gene-gene coexpression is significantly greater in gnotobiotic flies than in axenic flies (Wilcoxon rank-sum, p < 0.00001). The largest changes in transcript-transcript correlations between axenic (top-right) and gnotobiotic (bottom-left) conditions are confined to specific transcriptional modules. Genes are organized by assignments to modules, represented by the colored side-bars. b Description of each module (Additional file 5: Table S3 for details). Significantly differential coexpression was determined by permutation testing (Additional file 6: Table S4). "Y" indicates differential coexpression within a module. c Network diagrams of differentially expressed transcriptional modules. Nodes represent genes, numbered by module assignment. Edges represent correlations between nodes above/below a threshold of Spearman's rho 0.75 or −0.75
Fig. 2Microbiota generally increases gene coexpression above host-intrinsic capacity. The box plots show the strength of network structure (distributions of the coexpression index: unsigned squared Spearman's rho) for microbiota-independent modules (grouped together: the null distribution of coexpression, not differentially coexpressed (not DC)), each module with microbiota-dependent coexpression within the module, or between pairs of modules. For all microbiota-dependent modules except between modules 7 & 9, gene-gene coexpression is greater in gnotobiotic flies relative to axenic flies and microbiota-independent modules, indicating that the microbiota promotes network structure above the host's intrinsic capacity
Fig. 3Genes in nutrient signaling networks require microbiota for structured coexpression. Modules exhibiting microbiota-dependent structure included genes with key roles in the IIS/TOR/AMPK nutrient signaling network. Pairwise coexpression (Spearman's Rho) of genes in the IIS/TOR/AMPK network [38, 39] is presented, for genes in differentially coexpressed modules. FoxO was not clustered into a DC module, but is plotted in the figure since it is the major transcriptional output of IIS. Numbers in each cell represent correlation coefficients. The figure demonstrates that the microbiota affects the regulation of these networks at the level of structured gene coexpression