Abstract

Phenotypic states and evolutionary trajectories available to cell populations are ultimately dictated by complex interactions among DNA, RNA, proteins, and other molecular species. Here we study how evolution of gene regulation in a single-cell eukaryote S. cerevisiae is affected by interactions between transcription factors (TFs) and their cognate DNA sites. Our study is informed by a comprehensive collection of genomic binding sites and high-throughput in vitro measurements of TF-DNA binding interactions. Using an evolutionary model for monomorphic populations evolving on a fitness landscape, we infer fitness as a function of TF-DNA binding to show that the shape of the inferred fitness functions is in broad agreement with a simple functional form inspired by a thermodynamic model of two-state TF-DNA binding. However, the effective parameters of the model are not always consistent with physical values, indicating selection pressures beyond the biophysical constraints imposed by TF-DNA interactions. We find little statistical support for the fitness landscape in which each position in the binding site evolves independently, indicating that epistasis is common in the evolution of gene regulation. Finally, by correlating TF-DNA binding energies with biological properties of the sites or the genes they regulate, we are able to rule out several scenarios of site-specific selection, under which binding sites of the same TF would experience different selection pressures depending on their position in the genome. These findings support the existence of universal fitness landscapes which shape evolution of all sites for a given TF, and whose properties are determined in part by the physics of protein-DNA interactions.

Highlights

  • A powerful concept in evolution is the fitness landscape: for every possible genotype there is a number, known as the genotypic fitness, that characterizes the evolutionary success of that genotype [1]

  • We discuss how evolution of gene regulation is shaped by the need to maintain favorable binding energies between transcription factors and their genomic binding sites

  • Transcription factor binding is not affected by many biological properties, such as the essentiality of the gene it regulates

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Summary

Introduction

A powerful concept in evolution is the fitness landscape: for every possible genotype there is a number, known as the genotypic fitness, that characterizes the evolutionary success of that genotype [1]. The increasing availability of quantitative highthroughput data on in vitro and in vivo molecular interactions has led to growing efforts aimed at developing models of evolution that explicitly incorporate the underlying biophysics [11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25]. These models combine evolutionary theory with physical models of molecular systems, for example focusing on how protein folding stability or specificity of intermolecular interactions shapes the ensemble of accessible evolutionary pathways and steady-state distributions of biophysical phenotypes

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