Abstract

Various characteristics of complex gene regulatory networks (GRNs) have been discovered during the last decade, e.g., redundancy, exponential indegree distributions, scale-free outdegree distributions, mutational robustness, and evolvability. Although progress has been made in this field, it is not well understood whether these characteristics are the direct products of selection or those of other evolutionary forces such as mutational biases and biophysical constraints. To elucidate the causal factors that promoted the evolution of complex GRNs, we examined the effect of fluctuating environmental selection and some intrinsic constraining factors on GRN evolution by using an individual-based model. We found that the evolution of complex GRNs is remarkably promoted by fixation of beneficial gene duplications under unpredictably fluctuating environmental conditions and that some internal factors inherent in organisms, such as mutational bias, gene expression costs, and constraints on expression dynamics, are also important for the evolution of GRNs. The results indicate that various biological properties observed in GRNs could evolve as a result of not only adaptation to unpredictable environmental changes but also non-adaptive processes owing to the properties of the organisms themselves. Our study emphasizes that evolutionary models considering such intrinsic constraining factors should be used as null models to analyze the effect of selection on GRN evolution.

Highlights

  • The genetic basis of organismal evolution is one of the fundamental problems in biology [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]

  • The results show that most features of known gene regulatory networks evolve as a result of adaptation to unpredictable environmental fluctuations

  • Some internal organismal factors, such as mutational bias, gene expression costs, and constraints on expression dynamics, are important for Gene regulatory networks (GRNs) evolution observed in real organisms

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Summary

Introduction

The genetic basis of organismal evolution is one of the fundamental problems in biology [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]. Because genetic systems would modify the phenotypic effects of the mutations, the properties of the genetic system would influence the rates and directions of phenotypic evolution as well as the mutational robustness and evolvability [10,11,12,13,14,15]. Both phenotypes and genetic systems have evolved by mutually influencing each other. Recent studies have addressed the structural features of complex GRNs such as redundancy, scale-free outdegree distributions and exponential indegree distributions [4,21,22,23,24] and the contribution of these features to genetic characteristics such as mutational robustness and evolvability [25,26,27,28,29]

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