1. Mediation of Drosophila autosomal dosage effects and compensation by network interactions.
- Author
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Malone JH, Cho DY, Mattiuzzo NR, Artieri CG, Jiang L, Dale RK, Smith HE, McDaniel J, Munro S, Salit M, Andrews J, Przytycka TM, and Oliver B
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Genetically Modified genetics, Chromosomes, Insect genetics, Female, Gene Dosage, Genetic Heterogeneity, Male, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis methods, Transcriptome, X Chromosome genetics, Dosage Compensation, Genetic, Drosophila genetics, Gene Regulatory Networks, Genes, Insect
- Abstract
Background: Gene dosage change is a mild perturbation that is a valuable tool for pathway reconstruction in Drosophila. While it is often assumed that reducing gene dose by half leads to two-fold less expression, there is partial autosomal dosage compensation in Drosophila, which may be mediated by feedback or buffering in expression networks., Results: We profiled expression in engineered flies where gene dose was reduced from two to one. While expression of most one-dose genes was reduced, the gene-specific dose responses were heterogeneous. Expression of two-dose genes that are first-degree neighbors of one-dose genes in novel network models also changed, and the directionality of change depended on the response of one-dose genes., Conclusions: Our data indicate that expression perturbation propagates in network space. Autosomal compensation, or the lack thereof, is a gene-specific response, largely mediated by interactions with the rest of the transcriptome.
- Published
- 2012
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