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The Cellular Robustness by Genetic Redundancy in Budding Yeast

The frequent dispensability of duplicated genes in budding yeast is heralded as a hallmark of genetic robustness contributed by genetic redundancy. However, theoretical predictions suggest such backup by redundancy is evolutionarily unstable, and the extent of genetic robustness contributed from red...

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Autores principales: Li, Jingjing, Yuan, Zineng, Zhang, Zhaolei
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2973813/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21079672
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001187
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author Li, Jingjing
Yuan, Zineng
Zhang, Zhaolei
author_facet Li, Jingjing
Yuan, Zineng
Zhang, Zhaolei
author_sort Li, Jingjing
collection PubMed
description The frequent dispensability of duplicated genes in budding yeast is heralded as a hallmark of genetic robustness contributed by genetic redundancy. However, theoretical predictions suggest such backup by redundancy is evolutionarily unstable, and the extent of genetic robustness contributed from redundancy remains controversial. It is anticipated that, to achieve mutual buffering, the duplicated paralogs must at least share some functional overlap. However, counter-intuitively, several recent studies reported little functional redundancy between these buffering duplicates. The large yeast genetic interactions released recently allowed us to address these issues on a genome-wide scale. We herein characterized the synthetic genetic interactions for ∼500 pairs of yeast duplicated genes originated from either whole-genome duplication (WGD) or small-scale duplication (SSD) events. We established that functional redundancy between duplicates is a pre-requisite and thus is highly predictive of their backup capacity. This observation was particularly pronounced with the use of a newly introduced metric in scoring functional overlap between paralogs on the basis of gene ontology annotations. Even though mutual buffering was observed to be prevalent among duplicated genes, we showed that the observed backup capacity is largely an evolutionarily transient state. The loss of backup capacity generally follows a neutral mode, with the buffering strength decreasing in proportion to divergence time, and the vast majority of the paralogs have already lost their backup capacity. These observations validated previous theoretic predictions about instability of genetic redundancy. However, departing from the general neutral mode, intriguingly, our analysis revealed the presence of natural selection in stabilizing functional overlap between SSD pairs. These selected pairs, both WGD and SSD, tend to have decelerated functional evolution, have higher propensities of co-clustering into the same protein complexes, and share common interacting partners. Our study revealed the general principles for the long-term retention of genetic redundancy.
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spelling pubmed-29738132010-11-15 The Cellular Robustness by Genetic Redundancy in Budding Yeast Li, Jingjing Yuan, Zineng Zhang, Zhaolei PLoS Genet Research Article The frequent dispensability of duplicated genes in budding yeast is heralded as a hallmark of genetic robustness contributed by genetic redundancy. However, theoretical predictions suggest such backup by redundancy is evolutionarily unstable, and the extent of genetic robustness contributed from redundancy remains controversial. It is anticipated that, to achieve mutual buffering, the duplicated paralogs must at least share some functional overlap. However, counter-intuitively, several recent studies reported little functional redundancy between these buffering duplicates. The large yeast genetic interactions released recently allowed us to address these issues on a genome-wide scale. We herein characterized the synthetic genetic interactions for ∼500 pairs of yeast duplicated genes originated from either whole-genome duplication (WGD) or small-scale duplication (SSD) events. We established that functional redundancy between duplicates is a pre-requisite and thus is highly predictive of their backup capacity. This observation was particularly pronounced with the use of a newly introduced metric in scoring functional overlap between paralogs on the basis of gene ontology annotations. Even though mutual buffering was observed to be prevalent among duplicated genes, we showed that the observed backup capacity is largely an evolutionarily transient state. The loss of backup capacity generally follows a neutral mode, with the buffering strength decreasing in proportion to divergence time, and the vast majority of the paralogs have already lost their backup capacity. These observations validated previous theoretic predictions about instability of genetic redundancy. However, departing from the general neutral mode, intriguingly, our analysis revealed the presence of natural selection in stabilizing functional overlap between SSD pairs. These selected pairs, both WGD and SSD, tend to have decelerated functional evolution, have higher propensities of co-clustering into the same protein complexes, and share common interacting partners. Our study revealed the general principles for the long-term retention of genetic redundancy. Public Library of Science 2010-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC2973813/ /pubmed/21079672 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001187 Text en Li et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Li, Jingjing
Yuan, Zineng
Zhang, Zhaolei
The Cellular Robustness by Genetic Redundancy in Budding Yeast
title The Cellular Robustness by Genetic Redundancy in Budding Yeast
title_full The Cellular Robustness by Genetic Redundancy in Budding Yeast
title_fullStr The Cellular Robustness by Genetic Redundancy in Budding Yeast
title_full_unstemmed The Cellular Robustness by Genetic Redundancy in Budding Yeast
title_short The Cellular Robustness by Genetic Redundancy in Budding Yeast
title_sort cellular robustness by genetic redundancy in budding yeast
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2973813/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21079672
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001187
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