Abstract

In functional genomics studies, research is dedicated to unveiling the function of genes using gene-knockouts, model organisms in which a gene is artificially inactivated. The idea is that, by knocking out the gene, the provoked phenotype would inform us about the function of the gene. Still, the function of many genes cannot be elucidated, because disruption of conserved sequences, including protein-coding genes, often does not directly affect the phenotype. Since the phenomenon was first observed in the early nineties of the last century, these so-called ‘no-phenotype knockouts’ have met with great skepticism and resistance by died-in-the-wool selectionists. Still, functional genomics of the late 20th and early 21st centuries has taught us two important lessons. First, two or more unrelated genes can often substitute for each other; and second, some genes are only present in the genome in a silent state. In the laboratory, the disruption of such genes does not negatively influence reproductive success, and does not show measurable fitness effects of the species. The genes are redundant. Genetic redundancy, one of the big surprises of modern biology, can thus be defined as the condition in which the inactivation of a gene is selectively neutral. The no-phenotype knockout is not just a freak of the laboratory. Genetic variants known as homozygous loss-of-function (HLOF) variants are of considerable scientific and clinical interest, as they represent experiments of nature qualifying as “natural knockouts”. Such natural knockouts challenge the conventional NeoDarwinian appraisal that genetic information is the result of natural selection acting on random genetic variation.

Highlights

  • In functional genomics studies, research is dedicated to unveiling the function of genes using gene-knockouts, model organisms in which a gene is artificially inactivated

  • Variants are of considerable scientific and clinical interest, as they represent experiments of nature qualifying as “natural knockouts”. Such natural knockouts challenge the conventional NeoDarwinian appraisal that genetic information is the result of natural selection acting on random genetic variation

  • Angiogenin has been the topic of extensive scrutiny, since tumors produce blood vessel promoting growth factors, including angiogenin

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Summary

Natural Knockouts

Angiogenesis is an intricate process involving many cooperating genes, proteins and regulatory molecules. Angiogenin has been the topic of extensive scrutiny, since tumors produce blood vessel promoting growth factors, including angiogenin. Cancer researchers would like to have a mouse knockout for the angiogenin gene. The genome of the mouse contains three copies of the angiogenin gene. To create an informative angiogenin knockout mouse model for research purposes, three copies of Biology 2017, 6, 43; doi:10.3390/biology6040043 www.mdpi.com/journal/biology. The haploid genomes of primates only contain one copy of the angiogenin gene, and would make better angiogenin knockout models. Langur does not have a functional angiogenin protein, because the gene contains a one-nucleotide deletion mutation in the sixth codon. How can single-copy genes be dispensable in a NeoDarwinian world? How could angiogenin be naturally selected if an operable blood vessel formation system was already in place? What was the selective constraint that prompted the angiogenin gene to evolve?

The CCR5 Entry
The EPO Switch
The Endurance Gene?
Each of Us: A Natural Knockout for Many Genes
Findings
Selection’s Inaptness
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