Abstract

BackgroundDespite sharing the same genes, identical twins demonstrate substantial variability in behavioral traits and in their risk for disease. Epigenetic factors–DNA and chromatin modifications that affect levels of gene expression without affecting the DNA sequence–are thought to be important in establishing this variability. Epigenetically-mediated differences in the levels of gene expression that are associated with individual variability traditionally are thought to occur only in a gene-specific manner. We challenge this idea by exploring the large-scale organizational patterns of gene expression in an epigenetic model of behavioral variability.Methodology/FindingsTo study the effects of epigenetic influences on behavioral variability, we examine gene expression in genetically identical mice. Using a novel approach to microarray analysis, we show that variability in the large-scale organization of gene expression levels, rather than differences in the expression levels of specific genes, is associated with individual differences in behavior. Specifically, increased activity in the open field is associated with increased variance of log-transformed measures of gene expression in the hippocampus, a brain region involved in open field activity. Early life experience that increases adult activity in the open field also similarly modifies the variance of gene expression levels. The same association of the variance of gene expression levels with behavioral variability is found with levels of gene expression in the hippocampus of genetically heterogeneous outbred populations of mice, suggesting that variation in the large-scale organization of gene expression levels may also be relevant to phenotypic differences in outbred populations such as humans. We find that the increased variance in gene expression levels is attributable to an increasing separation of several large, log-normally distributed families of gene expression levels. We also show that the presence of these multiple log-normal distributions of gene expression levels is a universal characteristic of gene expression in eurkaryotes. We use data from the MicroArray Quality Control Project (MAQC) to demonstrate that our method is robust and that it reliably detects biological differences in the large-scale organization of gene expression levels.ConclusionsOur results contrast with the traditional belief that epigenetic effects on gene expression occur only at the level of specific genes and suggest instead that the large-scale organization of gene expression levels provides important insights into the relationship of gene expression with behavioral variability. Understanding the epigenetic, genetic, and environmental factors that regulate the large-scale organization of gene expression levels, and how changes in this large-scale organization influences brain development and behavior will be a major future challenge in the field of behavioral genomics.

Highlights

  • Genetically identical twins in humans and other organisms are strikingly similar in appearance, they are paradoxically discordant for many important phenotypes and complex diseases [1,2]

  • To examine epigenetic influences on the large-scale organization of gene expression levels, we studied the relationship of gene expression organization in the hippocampus with stable individual differences in activity in the open field in genetically identical mice

  • Gene expression levels are highly skewed such that a majority of genes are expressed at low levels while a relatively small number of highly expressed genes account for the majority of total gene expression

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Summary

Introduction

Genetically identical twins in humans and other organisms are strikingly similar in appearance, they are paradoxically discordant for many important phenotypes and complex diseases [1,2]. For example, variations in maternal care during the early postnatal period produces modifications of chromatin and demethylation of DNA within offspring brains which in turn are associated with stable changes in gene expression, brain development, and behavior [6]. Both inherited and environmental factors produce epigenetic modifications that, in turn, influence gene expression and phenotypic variation. We challenge this idea by exploring the large-scale organizational patterns of gene expression in an epigenetic model of behavioral variability

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