Abstract

Cryptic genetic variation could arise from, for example, Gene-by-Gene (G-by-G) or Gene-by-Environment (G-by-E) interactions. The underlying molecular mechanisms and how they influence allelic effects and the genetic variance of complex traits is largely unclear. Here, we empirically explored the role of environmentally influenced epistasis on the suppression and release of cryptic variation by reanalysing a dataset of 4,390 haploid yeast segregants phenotyped on 20 different media. The focus was on 130 epistatic loci, each contributing to segregant growth in at least one environment and that together explained most (69-100%) of the narrow sense heritability of growth in the individual environments. We revealed that the epistatic growth network reorganised upon environmental changes to alter the estimated marginal (additive) effects of the individual loci, how multi-locus interactions contributed to individual segregant growth and the level of expressed genetic variance in growth. The estimated additive effects varied most across environments for loci that were highly interactive network hubs in some environments but had few or no interactors in other environments, resulting in changes in total genetic variance across environments. This environmentally dependent epistasis was thus an important mechanism for the suppression and release of cryptic variation in this population. Our findings increase the understanding of the complex genetic mechanisms leading to cryptic variation in populations, providing a basis for future studies on the genetic maintenance of trait robustness and development of genetic models for studying and predicting selection responses for quantitative traits in breeding and evolution.

Highlights

  • Cryptic or hidden genetic variation is a type of genetic variation normally not seen but can, as has been shown experimentally in many species, emerge from polymorphisms changing their effects upon genetic (G-by-G interaction; Epistasis) [1,2,3] or environmental (G-by-E interaction) [4,5,6,7] perturbations

  • We explored how often, and which, connections in the epistatic networks change across environments and how these changes in the networks affected the level of genetic variance in growth displayed by the population (G-by-G-by-E interactions)

  • We explore how the activity of the interactions in this complete epistatic network changed across the evaluated environments and how this resulted in changes in classic quantitative genetics measures of the contributions of the involved loci to yeast growth

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Summary

Introduction

Cryptic or hidden genetic variation is a type of genetic variation normally not seen but can, as has been shown experimentally in many species, emerge from polymorphisms changing their effects upon genetic (G-by-G interaction; Epistasis) [1,2,3] or environmental (G-by-E interaction) [4,5,6,7] perturbations. By experimentally generating combinations of mutant alleles/genes, the environmental dependence of epistatic interactions between genes (G-by-G-by-E) has been shown for binary (presence/absence) phenotypes in E. coli, S. cerevisiae, D. melanogaster and A. thaliana [12,13,17,18,19,25,26] This environmentally dependent epistasis affected both pairwise [13,20,21,22,23,24] and high-order [14,15,16] interactions, and resulted in abundant changes in connectivity and output of interaction networks in response to environmental changes for interaction networks built for single nucleotide polymorphisms [17,18,19] and genes [27,28,29]

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