Abstract

Deleterious genetic mutations allow developmental biologists to understand how genes control development. However, not all loss of function genetic mutants develop phenotypic changes. Many deleterious mutations only produce a phenotype in a subset of mutant individuals, a phenomenon known as incomplete penetrance. Incomplete penetrance can confound analyses of gene function and our understanding of this widespread phenomenon remains inadequate. To better understand what controls penetrance, we capitalized on the zebrafish mef2ca mutant which produces craniofacial phenotypes with variable penetrance. Starting with a characterized mef2ca loss of function mutant allele, we used classical selective breeding methods to generate zebrafish strains in which mutant-associated phenotypes consistently appear with low or high penetrance. Strikingly, our selective breeding for low penetrance converted the mef2ca mutant allele behavior from homozygous lethal to homozygous viable. Meanwhile, selective breeding for high penetrance converted the mef2ca mutant allele from fully recessive to partially dominant. Comparing the selectively-bred low- and high-penetrance strains revealed that the strains initially respond similarly to the mutation, but then gene expression differences between strains emerge during development. Thus, altered temporal genetic circuitry can manifest through selective pressure to modify mutant penetrance. Specifically, we demonstrate differences in Notch signaling between strains, and further show that experimental manipulation of the Notch pathway phenocopies penetrance changes occurring through selective breeding. This study provides evidence that penetrance is inherited as a liability-threshold trait. Our finding that vertebrate animals can overcome a deleterious mutation by tuning genetic circuitry complements other reported mechanisms of overcoming deleterious mutations such as transcriptional adaptation of compensatory genes, alternative mRNA splicing, and maternal deposition of wild-type transcripts, which are not observed in our system. The selective breeding approach and the resultant genetic circuitry change we uncovered advances and expands our current understanding of genetic and developmental resilience.

Highlights

  • IntroductionCertain gene mutations arising from traditional zebrafish forward-genetic screens only produce a phenotype in a subset of mutant individuals, a phenomenon known as incomplete penetrance [1]

  • Some mutant organisms do not manifest a phenotypeCertain gene mutations arising from traditional zebrafish forward-genetic screens only produce a phenotype in a subset of mutant individuals, a phenomenon known as incomplete penetrance [1]

  • Genes under the control of mef2ca are initially expressed between the two strains, but differences between strains emerge during development

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Summary

Introduction

Certain gene mutations arising from traditional zebrafish forward-genetic screens only produce a phenotype in a subset of mutant individuals, a phenomenon known as incomplete penetrance [1]. Incomplete penetrance has long been appreciated in many organisms, the mechanisms underlying the phenomenon are not completely clear. A recent sequencing study uncovered human individuals harboring mutations for severe Mendelian conditions, thought to be fully penetrant, that do not display a disease phenotype [3]. Incomplete penetrance among human genetic diseases might be more widespread than previously appreciated. The discovery of healthy individuals buffering the effects of deleterious mutations led to the emerging concept of genetic resilience, or the ability of an organism to overcome a deleterious mutation. Model systems like the zebrafish provide an opportunity to test mechanistic hypotheses about genetic resilience

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