Abstract

Haplolethals (HL) are regions of diploid genomes that in one dose are fatal for the organism. Their biological meaning is obscure because heterozygous loss-of-function mutations result in dominant lethality (DL) and, consequently, should be under strong negative selection. We report an in depth study of the HL associated to the gene wings up A (wupA). It encodes 13 transcripts (A-M) that yield 11 protein isoforms (A-K) of Troponin I (TnI). They are functionally diverse in their control of muscle contraction, cell polarity and cell proliferation. Isoform K transfers to the nucleus where it increases transcription of the cell proliferation related genes CDK2, CDK4, Rap and Rab5. The nuclear translocation of isoform K is prevented by the co-expression of A or B isoforms, which illustrates isoform interactions. The corresponding DL mutations are, either DNA rearrangements clustered towards the gene 3’ end, thus affecting the genomic organization of all transcripts, or CRISPR-induced mutations in one of the two ATG sites which eliminate a subset of wupA products. The joint elimination of isoforms C, F, G and H, however, do not cause DL phenotypes. Genetically driven expression of single isoforms rescue neither DL nor any of the mutants known in the gene, suggesting that normal function requires properly regulated expression of specific combinations, rather than single, TnI isoforms. We conclude that the wupA associated HL results from the combined haploinsufficiency of a large set of TnI isoforms. The qualitative and quantitative normal expression of which, requires the chromosomal integrity of the wupA genomic region. Since all fly TnI isoforms are encoded in the same gene, its HL condition becomes unavoidable. These wupA features are comparable to those of dpp, the only other HL studied to some extent, and reveal a scenario of strict dosage dependence with implications for gene expression regulation and splitting.

Highlights

  • Diploid organisms are endowed with two genomic copies inherited from the parental generation

  • We analyzed the case of one of the five haplolethal regions of Drosophila, the one associated to the Troponin I encoding gene wings up A (wupA), by measuring the transcriptional effects of mutations and chromosomal rearrangements affecting this gene

  • The data show that this haplolethality results from the combined insufficiency of a large number of Troponin I isoforms, which are functionally specialized, show interference and require the integrity of the native chromatin structure for their quantitatively regulated expression

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Summary

Introduction

Diploid organisms are endowed with two genomic copies inherited from the parental generation. The gain or loss of small fragments from one or both of these genomic copies is referred to as segmental aneuploidies. 120 genes have never been recovered as deletions, suggesting that the absence of one copy of these genes may be lethal in the diploid phase of yeast [7]. Isolating such deletions is only feasible in diploid organisms by using suitable deficiencies and duplications. These regions are properly named as haplolethals (HL). HL is a class of segmental aneuploidy whose nature remains largely unexplored due to the inherent difficulties to study them

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