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Transcription factor expression levels and environmental signals constrain transcription factor innovation

Evolutionary innovation of transcription factors frequently drives phenotypic diversification and adaptation to environmental change. Transcription factors can gain or lose connections to target genes, resulting in novel regulatory responses and phenotypes. However the frequency of functional adapta...

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Autores principales: Shepherd, Matthew J., Reynolds, Mitchell, Pierce, Aidan P., Rice, Alan M., Taylor, Tiffany B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Microbiology Society 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10482368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37584667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.001378
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author Shepherd, Matthew J.
Reynolds, Mitchell
Pierce, Aidan P.
Rice, Alan M.
Taylor, Tiffany B.
author_facet Shepherd, Matthew J.
Reynolds, Mitchell
Pierce, Aidan P.
Rice, Alan M.
Taylor, Tiffany B.
author_sort Shepherd, Matthew J.
collection PubMed
description Evolutionary innovation of transcription factors frequently drives phenotypic diversification and adaptation to environmental change. Transcription factors can gain or lose connections to target genes, resulting in novel regulatory responses and phenotypes. However the frequency of functional adaptation varies between different regulators, even when they are closely related. To identify factors influencing propensity for innovation, we utilise a Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 strain rendered incapable of flagellar mediated motility in soft-agar plates via deletion of the flagellar master regulator (fleQ). This bacterium can evolve to rescue flagellar motility via gene regulatory network rewiring of an alternative transcription factor to rescue activity of FleQ. Previously, we have identified two members (out of 22) of the RpoN-dependent enhancer binding protein (RpoN-EBP) family of transcription factors (NtrC and PFLU1132) that are capable of innovating in this way. These two transcription factors rescue motility repeatably and reliably in a strict hierarchy – with NtrC the only route in a ∆fleQ background, and PFLU1132 the only route in a ∆fleQ∆ntrC background. However, why other members in the same transcription factor family have not been observed to rescue flagellar activity is unclear. Previous work shows that protein homology cannot explain this pattern within the protein family (RpoN-EBPs), and mutations in strains that rescued motility suggested high levels of transcription factor expression and activation drive innovation. We predict that mutations that increase expression of the transcription factor are vital to unlock evolutionary potential for innovation. Here, we construct titratable expression mutant lines for 11 of the RpoN-EBPs in P. fluorescens . We show that in five additional RpoN-EBPs (FleR, HbcR, GcsR, DctD, AauR and PFLU2209), high expression levels result in different mutations conferring motility rescue, suggesting alternative rewiring pathways. Our results indicate that expression levels (and not protein homology) of RpoN-EBPs are a key constraining factor in determining evolutionary potential for innovation. This suggests that transcription factors that can achieve high expression through few mutational changes, or transcription factors that are active in the selective environment, are more likely to innovate and contribute to adaptive gene regulatory network evolution.
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spelling pubmed-104823682023-09-07 Transcription factor expression levels and environmental signals constrain transcription factor innovation Shepherd, Matthew J. Reynolds, Mitchell Pierce, Aidan P. Rice, Alan M. Taylor, Tiffany B. Microbiology (Reading) Microbial Evolution Evolutionary innovation of transcription factors frequently drives phenotypic diversification and adaptation to environmental change. Transcription factors can gain or lose connections to target genes, resulting in novel regulatory responses and phenotypes. However the frequency of functional adaptation varies between different regulators, even when they are closely related. To identify factors influencing propensity for innovation, we utilise a Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 strain rendered incapable of flagellar mediated motility in soft-agar plates via deletion of the flagellar master regulator (fleQ). This bacterium can evolve to rescue flagellar motility via gene regulatory network rewiring of an alternative transcription factor to rescue activity of FleQ. Previously, we have identified two members (out of 22) of the RpoN-dependent enhancer binding protein (RpoN-EBP) family of transcription factors (NtrC and PFLU1132) that are capable of innovating in this way. These two transcription factors rescue motility repeatably and reliably in a strict hierarchy – with NtrC the only route in a ∆fleQ background, and PFLU1132 the only route in a ∆fleQ∆ntrC background. However, why other members in the same transcription factor family have not been observed to rescue flagellar activity is unclear. Previous work shows that protein homology cannot explain this pattern within the protein family (RpoN-EBPs), and mutations in strains that rescued motility suggested high levels of transcription factor expression and activation drive innovation. We predict that mutations that increase expression of the transcription factor are vital to unlock evolutionary potential for innovation. Here, we construct titratable expression mutant lines for 11 of the RpoN-EBPs in P. fluorescens . We show that in five additional RpoN-EBPs (FleR, HbcR, GcsR, DctD, AauR and PFLU2209), high expression levels result in different mutations conferring motility rescue, suggesting alternative rewiring pathways. Our results indicate that expression levels (and not protein homology) of RpoN-EBPs are a key constraining factor in determining evolutionary potential for innovation. This suggests that transcription factors that can achieve high expression through few mutational changes, or transcription factors that are active in the selective environment, are more likely to innovate and contribute to adaptive gene regulatory network evolution. Microbiology Society 2023-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10482368/ /pubmed/37584667 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.001378 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. This article was made open access via a Publish and Read agreement between the Microbiology Society and the corresponding author’s institution.
spellingShingle Microbial Evolution
Shepherd, Matthew J.
Reynolds, Mitchell
Pierce, Aidan P.
Rice, Alan M.
Taylor, Tiffany B.
Transcription factor expression levels and environmental signals constrain transcription factor innovation
title Transcription factor expression levels and environmental signals constrain transcription factor innovation
title_full Transcription factor expression levels and environmental signals constrain transcription factor innovation
title_fullStr Transcription factor expression levels and environmental signals constrain transcription factor innovation
title_full_unstemmed Transcription factor expression levels and environmental signals constrain transcription factor innovation
title_short Transcription factor expression levels and environmental signals constrain transcription factor innovation
title_sort transcription factor expression levels and environmental signals constrain transcription factor innovation
topic Microbial Evolution
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10482368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37584667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.001378
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