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Mother–Fetus Immune Cross-Talk Coordinates “Extrinsic”/“Intrinsic” Embryo Gene Expression Noise and Growth Stability

Developmental instability (DI) is thought to be inversely related to a capacity of an organism to buffer its development against random genetic and environmental perturbations. DI is represented by a trait’s inter- and intra-individual variabilities. The inter-individual variability (inversely refer...

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Autores principales: Babochkina, Tatyana Ivanovna, Gerlinskaya, Ludmila Alekseevna, Anisimova, Margarita Vladimirovna, Kontsevaya, Galina Vladimirovna, Feofanova, Natalia Aleksandrovna, Stanova, Aliya Konstantinovna, Moshkin, Mikhail Pavlovich, Moshkin, Yuri Mikhailovich
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9604428/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36293324
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232012467
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author Babochkina, Tatyana Ivanovna
Gerlinskaya, Ludmila Alekseevna
Anisimova, Margarita Vladimirovna
Kontsevaya, Galina Vladimirovna
Feofanova, Natalia Aleksandrovna
Stanova, Aliya Konstantinovna
Moshkin, Mikhail Pavlovich
Moshkin, Yuri Mikhailovich
author_facet Babochkina, Tatyana Ivanovna
Gerlinskaya, Ludmila Alekseevna
Anisimova, Margarita Vladimirovna
Kontsevaya, Galina Vladimirovna
Feofanova, Natalia Aleksandrovna
Stanova, Aliya Konstantinovna
Moshkin, Mikhail Pavlovich
Moshkin, Yuri Mikhailovich
author_sort Babochkina, Tatyana Ivanovna
collection PubMed
description Developmental instability (DI) is thought to be inversely related to a capacity of an organism to buffer its development against random genetic and environmental perturbations. DI is represented by a trait’s inter- and intra-individual variabilities. The inter-individual variability (inversely referred to as canalization) indicates the capability of organisms to reproduce a trait from individual to individual. The intra-individual variability reflects an organism’s capability to stabilize a trait internally under the same conditions, and, for symmetric traits, it is expressed as fluctuating asymmetry (FA). When representing a trait as a random variable conditioned on environmental fluctuations, it is clear that, in statistical terms, the DI partitions into “extrinsic” (canalization) and “intrinsic” (FA) components of a trait’s variance/noise. We established a simple statistical framework to dissect both parts of a symmetric trait variance/noise using a PCA (principal component analysis) projection of the left/right measurements on eigenvectors followed by GAMLSS (generalized additive models for location scale and shape) modeling of eigenvalues. The first eigenvalue represents “extrinsic” and the second—“intrinsic” DI components. We applied this framework to investigate the impact of mother–fetus major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-mediated immune cross-talk on gene expression noise and developmental stability. We showed that “intrinsic” gene noise for the entire transcriptional landscape could be estimated from a small subset of randomly selected genes. Using a diagnostic set of genes, we found that allogeneic MHC combinations tended to decrease “extrinsic” and “intrinsic” gene noise in C57BL/6J embryos developing in the surrogate NOD-SCID and BALB/c mothers. The “intrinsic” gene noise was negatively correlated with growth (embryonic mass) and the levels of placental growth factor (PLGF), but not vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). However, it was positively associated with phenotypic growth instability and noise in PLGF. In mammals, the mother–fetus MHC interaction plays a significant role in development, contributing to the fitness of the offspring. Our results demonstrate that a positive impact of distant MHC combinations on embryonic growth could be mediated by the reduction of “intrinsic” gene noise followed by the developmental stabilization of growth.
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spelling pubmed-96044282022-10-27 Mother–Fetus Immune Cross-Talk Coordinates “Extrinsic”/“Intrinsic” Embryo Gene Expression Noise and Growth Stability Babochkina, Tatyana Ivanovna Gerlinskaya, Ludmila Alekseevna Anisimova, Margarita Vladimirovna Kontsevaya, Galina Vladimirovna Feofanova, Natalia Aleksandrovna Stanova, Aliya Konstantinovna Moshkin, Mikhail Pavlovich Moshkin, Yuri Mikhailovich Int J Mol Sci Article Developmental instability (DI) is thought to be inversely related to a capacity of an organism to buffer its development against random genetic and environmental perturbations. DI is represented by a trait’s inter- and intra-individual variabilities. The inter-individual variability (inversely referred to as canalization) indicates the capability of organisms to reproduce a trait from individual to individual. The intra-individual variability reflects an organism’s capability to stabilize a trait internally under the same conditions, and, for symmetric traits, it is expressed as fluctuating asymmetry (FA). When representing a trait as a random variable conditioned on environmental fluctuations, it is clear that, in statistical terms, the DI partitions into “extrinsic” (canalization) and “intrinsic” (FA) components of a trait’s variance/noise. We established a simple statistical framework to dissect both parts of a symmetric trait variance/noise using a PCA (principal component analysis) projection of the left/right measurements on eigenvectors followed by GAMLSS (generalized additive models for location scale and shape) modeling of eigenvalues. The first eigenvalue represents “extrinsic” and the second—“intrinsic” DI components. We applied this framework to investigate the impact of mother–fetus major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-mediated immune cross-talk on gene expression noise and developmental stability. We showed that “intrinsic” gene noise for the entire transcriptional landscape could be estimated from a small subset of randomly selected genes. Using a diagnostic set of genes, we found that allogeneic MHC combinations tended to decrease “extrinsic” and “intrinsic” gene noise in C57BL/6J embryos developing in the surrogate NOD-SCID and BALB/c mothers. The “intrinsic” gene noise was negatively correlated with growth (embryonic mass) and the levels of placental growth factor (PLGF), but not vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). However, it was positively associated with phenotypic growth instability and noise in PLGF. In mammals, the mother–fetus MHC interaction plays a significant role in development, contributing to the fitness of the offspring. Our results demonstrate that a positive impact of distant MHC combinations on embryonic growth could be mediated by the reduction of “intrinsic” gene noise followed by the developmental stabilization of growth. MDPI 2022-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9604428/ /pubmed/36293324 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232012467 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Babochkina, Tatyana Ivanovna
Gerlinskaya, Ludmila Alekseevna
Anisimova, Margarita Vladimirovna
Kontsevaya, Galina Vladimirovna
Feofanova, Natalia Aleksandrovna
Stanova, Aliya Konstantinovna
Moshkin, Mikhail Pavlovich
Moshkin, Yuri Mikhailovich
Mother–Fetus Immune Cross-Talk Coordinates “Extrinsic”/“Intrinsic” Embryo Gene Expression Noise and Growth Stability
title Mother–Fetus Immune Cross-Talk Coordinates “Extrinsic”/“Intrinsic” Embryo Gene Expression Noise and Growth Stability
title_full Mother–Fetus Immune Cross-Talk Coordinates “Extrinsic”/“Intrinsic” Embryo Gene Expression Noise and Growth Stability
title_fullStr Mother–Fetus Immune Cross-Talk Coordinates “Extrinsic”/“Intrinsic” Embryo Gene Expression Noise and Growth Stability
title_full_unstemmed Mother–Fetus Immune Cross-Talk Coordinates “Extrinsic”/“Intrinsic” Embryo Gene Expression Noise and Growth Stability
title_short Mother–Fetus Immune Cross-Talk Coordinates “Extrinsic”/“Intrinsic” Embryo Gene Expression Noise and Growth Stability
title_sort mother–fetus immune cross-talk coordinates “extrinsic”/“intrinsic” embryo gene expression noise and growth stability
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9604428/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36293324
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232012467
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