Abstract

Gene expression responds to changes in conditions but also stochastically among individuals. In budding yeast, both expression responsiveness across conditions (“plasticity”) and cell-to-cell variation (“noise”) have been quantified for thousands of genes and found to correlate across genes. It has been argued therefore that noise and plasticity may be strongly coupled and mechanistically linked. This is consistent with some theoretical ideas, but a strong coupling between noise and plasticity also has the potential to introduce cost–benefit conflicts during evolution. For example, if high plasticity is beneficial (genes need to respond to the environment), but noise is detrimental (fluctuations are harmful), then strong coupling should be disfavored. Here, evidence is presented that cost–benefit conflicts do occur and that they constrain the evolution of gene expression and promoter usage. In contrast to recent assertions, coupling between noise and plasticity is not a general property, but one associated with particular mechanisms of transcription initiation. Further, promoter architectures associated with coupling are avoided when noise is most likely to be detrimental, and noise and plasticity are largely independent traits for core cellular components. In contrast, when genes are duplicated noise–plasticity coupling increases, consistent with reduced detrimental affects of expression variation. Noise–plasticity coupling is, therefore, an evolvable trait that may constrain the emergence of highly responsive gene expression and be selected against during evolution. Further, the global quantitative data in yeast suggest that one mechanism that relieves the constraints imposed by noise–plasticity coupling is gene duplication, providing an example of how duplication can facilitate escape from adaptive conflicts.

Highlights

  • For cellular adaptation gene expression must respond to changes in conditions

  • Noise–plasticity coupling is an evolvable trait Previous studies have suggested that each promoter may have a

  • It has been shown that this conclusion is not correct, but that the extent of noise–plasticity coupling relates to the mechanism of transcription initiation, and is confined to a subset of genes in yeast

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Summary

Introduction

For cellular adaptation gene expression must respond to changes in conditions. expression varies stochastically among cells in a population. The findings are supported by mechanistic studies where mutations that increase noise have increased plasticity [12,13] Several properties such as initiation from a TATA-box promoter [2,4,6] and high proximal promoter nucleosome occupancy [3,14,15] are enriched among genes with both high noise and high plasticity. It should be noted, that both properties are associated with genes with a wide range of noise and plasticity levels [2,3,4,6,14,15]

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