Literature DB >> 36134886

Variable paralog expression underlies phenotype variation.

Raisa Bailon-Zambrano1, Juliana Sucharov1, Abigail Mumme-Monheit1, Matthew Murry1, Amanda Stenzel1, Anthony T Pulvino1, Jennyfer M Mitchell1, Kathryn L Colborn2, James T Nichols1.   

Abstract

Human faces are variable; we look different from one another. Craniofacial disorders further increase facial variation. To understand craniofacial variation and how it can be buffered, we analyzed the zebrafish mef2ca mutant. When this transcription factor encoding gene is mutated, zebrafish develop dramatically variable craniofacial phenotypes. Years of selective breeding for low and high penetrance of mutant phenotypes produced strains that are either resilient or sensitive to the mef2ca mutation. Here, we compared gene expression between these strains, which revealed that selective breeding enriched for high and low mef2ca paralog expression in the low- and high-penetrance strains, respectively. We found that mef2ca paralog expression is variable in unselected wild-type zebrafish, motivating the hypothesis that heritable variation in paralog expression underlies mutant phenotype severity and variation. In support, mutagenizing the mef2ca paralogs, mef2aa, mef2b, mef2cb, and mef2d demonstrated modular buffering by paralogs. Specifically, some paralogs buffer severity while others buffer variability. We present a novel, mechanistic model for phenotypic variation where variable, vestigial paralog expression buffers development. These studies are a major step forward in understanding the mechanisms of facial variation, including how some genetically resilient individuals can overcome a deleterious mutation.
© 2022, Bailon-Zambrano, Sucharov et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  compensation; craniofacial development; developmental biology; developmental buffering; gene duplication; genetics; genomics; paralogs; robustness; subfunctionalization; variability; vestigial expression; zebrafish

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 36134886      PMCID: PMC9555865          DOI: 10.7554/eLife.79247

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Elife        ISSN: 2050-084X            Impact factor:   8.713


  77 in total

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Review 5.  Developmental mechanisms underlying variation in craniofacial disease and evolution.

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8.  Chromatin Environment and Cellular Context Specify Compensatory Activity of Paralogous MEF2 Transcription Factors.

Authors:  Shahriyar P Majidi; Naveen C Reddy; Michael J Moore; Hao Chen; Tomoko Yamada; Milena M Andzelm; Timothy J Cherry; Linda S Hu; Michael E Greenberg; Azad Bonni
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9.  Role of duplicate genes in robustness against deleterious human mutations.

Authors:  Tzu-Lin Hsiao; Dennis Vitkup
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10.  Paralog buffering contributes to the variable essentiality of genes in cancer cell lines.

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Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2019-10-25       Impact factor: 5.917

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