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Date publication

octobre 2016

Journal

Molecular biology and evolution

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr FEUGEAS Jean-Paul


Tous les auteurs :
Feugeas JP, Tourret J, Launay A, Bouvet O, Hoede C, Denamur E, Tenaillon O

Résumé

Gene expression is known to be the principle factor explaining how fast genes evolve. Highly transcribed genes evolve slowly because any negative impact caused by a particular mutation is magnified by protein abundance. However, gene expression is a phenotype that depends both on the environment and on the strains or species. We studied this phenotypic plasticity by analyzing the transcriptome profiles of four Escherichia coli strains grown in three different culture media, and explored how expression variability was linked to gene allelic diversity. Genes whose expression changed according to the media and not to the strains were less polymorphic than other genes. Genes for which transcription depended predominantly on the strain were more polymorphic than other genes and were involved in sensing and responding to environmental changes, with an overrepresentation of two-component system genes. Surprisingly, we found that the correlation between transcription and gene diversity was highly variable among growth conditions and could be used to quantify growth efficiency of a strain in a medium. Genetic variability was found to increase with gene expression in poor growth conditions. As such conditions are also characterized by down-regulation of all DNA repair systems, including transcription-coupled repair, we suggest that gene expression under stressful conditions may be mutagenic and thus leads to a variability in mutation rate among genes in the genome which contributes to the pattern of protein evolution.

Mots clés

adaptation, evolution, mutation, transcription

Référence

Mol. Biol. Evol.. 2016 10;33(10):2515-29