Abstract

Regulatory networks have evolved to allow gene expression to rapidly track changes in the environment as well as to buffer perturbations and maintain cellular homeostasis in the absence of change. Theoretical work and empirical investigation in Escherichia coli have shown that negative autoregulation confers both rapid response times and reduced intrinsic noise, which is reflected in the fact that almost half of Escherichia coli transcription factors are negatively autoregulated. However, negative autoregulation is rare amongst the transcription factors of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This difference is surprising because E. coli and S. cerevisiae otherwise have similar profiles of network motifs. In this study we investigate regulatory interactions amongst the transcription factors of Drosophila melanogaster and humans, and show that they have a similar dearth of negative autoregulation to that seen in S. cerevisiae. We then present a model demonstrating that this stiking difference in the noise reduction strategies used amongst species can be explained by constraints on the evolution of negative autoregulation in diploids. We show that regulatory interactions between pairs of homologous genes within the same cell can lead to under-dominance — mutations which result in stronger autoregulation, and decrease noise in homozygotes, paradoxically can cause increased noise in heterozygotes. This severely limits a diploid's ability to evolve negative autoregulation as a noise reduction mechanism. Our work offers a simple and general explanation for a previously unexplained difference between the regulatory architectures of E. coli and yeast, Drosophila and humans. It also demonstrates that the effects of diploidy in gene networks can have counter-intuitive consequences that may profoundly influence the course of evolution.

Highlights

  • Negative autoregulation is a network motif in which a transcription factor inhibits its own expression

  • One important mechanism of noise reduction for transcription factors is negative autoregulation, in which a gene product represses its own rate of transcription

  • Negative auotregulation occurs frequently in E. coli but, we find, occurs much more rarely in S. cerevisiae, D. melanogaster and humans

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Summary

Introduction

Negative autoregulation is a network motif in which a transcription factor inhibits its own expression. Theoretical work has shown that this type of regulation reduces intrinsic noise and quickens the response time to environmental perturbations [1,2,3] and experiments using artificial gene regulatory circuits in E. coli have confirmed these predictions [2]. Negative autoregulation represents a simple yet powerful mechanism to maintain cellular homeostasis in the face of environmental and metabolic perturbations and reduce the often substantial fitness costs that noise can incur [4]. In E. coli, close to 50% of transcription factors (82 out of 182) [5,6,7,8] have been shown to negatively autoregulate. Negative autoregulation is almost entirely absent amongst the transcription factors that have been studied in S. cerevisiae (3 out of 169) [6,8,9,10,11]

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