Literature DB >> 33579953

Genes and genomes and unnecessary complexity in precision medicine.

Rama S Singh1, Bhagwati P Gupta2.   

Abstract

The sequencing of the human genome heralded the new age of 'genetic medicine' and raised the hope of precision medicine facilitating prolonged and healthy lives. Recent studies have dampened this expectation, as the relationships among mutations (termed 'risk factors'), biological processes, and diseases have emerged to be more complex than initially anticipated. In this review, we elaborate upon the nature of the relationship between genotype and phenotype, between chance-laden molecular complexity and the evolution of complex traits, and the relevance of this relationship to precision medicine. Molecular contingency, i.e., chance-driven molecular changes, in conjunction with the blind nature of evolutionary processes, creates genetic redundancy or multiple molecular pathways to the same phenotype; as time goes on, these pathways become more complex, interconnected, and hierarchically integrated. Based on the proposition that gene-gene interactions provide the major source of variation for evolutionary change, we present a theory of molecular complexity and posit that it consists of two parts, necessary and unnecessary complexity, both of which are inseparable and increase over time. We argue that, unlike necessary complexity, comprising all aspects of the organism's genetic program, unnecessary complexity is evolutionary baggage: the result of molecular constraints, historical circumstances, and the blind nature of evolutionary forces. In the short term, unnecessary complexity can give rise to similar risk factors with different genetic backgrounds; in the long term, genes become functionally interconnected and integrated, directly or indirectly, affecting multiple traits simultaneously. We reason that in addition to personal genomics and precision medicine, unnecessary complexity has consequences in evolutionary biology.

Year:  2020        PMID: 33579953     DOI: 10.1038/s41525-020-0128-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  NPJ Genom Med        ISSN: 2056-7944            Impact factor:   8.617


  50 in total

Review 1.  The origins, patterns and implications of human spontaneous mutation.

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3.  Cause and effect in biology.

Authors:  E MAYR
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4.  Gene regulatory networks and the role of robustness and stochasticity in the control of gene expression.

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Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2011-02-04       Impact factor: 9.043

5.  Evolution and tinkering.

Authors:  F Jacob
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Review 6.  Darwin's legacy II: why biology is not physics, or why it has taken a century to see the dependence of genes on the environment.

Authors:  Rama S Singh
Journal:  Genome       Date:  2015-04-15       Impact factor: 2.166

7.  Evolutionary rate at the molecular level.

Authors:  M Kimura
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1968-02-17       Impact factor: 49.962

8.  The Personal Genome Project Canada: findings from whole genome sequences of the inaugural 56 participants.

Authors:  Miriam S Reuter; Susan Walker; Bhooma Thiruvahindrapuram; Joe Whitney; Iris Cohn; Neal Sondheimer; Ryan K C Yuen; Brett Trost; Tara A Paton; Sergio L Pereira; Jo-Anne Herbrick; Richard F Wintle; Daniele Merico; Jennifer Howe; Jeffrey R MacDonald; Chao Lu; Thomas Nalpathamkalam; Wilson W L Sung; Zhuozhi Wang; Rohan V Patel; Giovanna Pellecchia; John Wei; Lisa J Strug; Sherilyn Bell; Barbara Kellam; Melanie M Mahtani; Anne S Bassett; Yvonne Bombard; Rosanna Weksberg; Cheryl Shuman; Ronald D Cohn; Dimitri J Stavropoulos; Sarah Bowdin; Matthew R Hildebrandt; Wei Wei; Asli Romm; Peter Pasceri; James Ellis; Peter Ray; M Stephen Meyn; Nasim Monfared; S Mohsen Hosseini; Ann M Joseph-George; Fred W Keeley; Ryan A Cook; Marc Fiume; Hin C Lee; Christian R Marshall; Jill Davies; Allison Hazell; Janet A Buchanan; Michael J Szego; Stephen W Scherer
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9.  Impact of deleterious passenger mutations on cancer progression.

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Review 10.  The distribution of fitness effects of new mutations.

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Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2007-08       Impact factor: 53.242

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