Wagner Andreas
Yale University, Department of Biology, Center for Computational Ecology, OML327, P.O. Box 208104, New Haven, Connecticut, 06520-8104.
Evolution. 1996 Jun;50(3):1008-1023. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1996.tb02342.x.
During the development of a multicellular organism from a zygote, a large number of epigenetic interactions take place on every level of suborganismal organization. This raises the possibility that the system of epigenetic interactions may compensate or "buffer" some of the changes that occur as mutations on its lowest levels, and thus stabilize the phenotype with respect to mutations. This hypothetical phenomenon will be called "epigenetic stability." Its potential importance stems from the fact that phenotypic variation with a genetic basis is an essential prerequisite for evolution. Thus, variation in epigenetic stability might profoundly affect attainable rates of evolution. While representing a systemic property of a developmental system, epigenetic stability might itself be genetically determined and thus be subject to evolutionary change. Whether or not this is the case should ideally be answered directly, that is, by experimentation. The time scale involved and our insufficient quantitative understanding of developmental pathways will probably preclude such an approach in the foreseeable future. Preliminary answers are sought here by using a biochemically motivated model of a small but central part of a developmental pathway. Modeled are sets of transcriptional regulators that mutually regulate each other's expression and thereby form stable gene expression patterns. Such gene-expression patterns, crucially involved in determining developmental pattern formation events, are most likely subject to strong stabilizing natural selection. After long periods of stabilizing selection, the fraction of mutations causing changes in gene-expression patterns is substantially reduced in the model. Epigenetic stability has increased. This phenomenon is found for widely varying regulatory scenarios among transcription factor genes. It is discussed that only epistatic (nonlinear) gene interactions can cause such change in epigenetic stability. Evidence from paleontology, molecular evolution, development, and genetics, consistent with the existence of variation in epigenetic stability, is discussed. The relation of epigenetic stability to developmental canalization is outlined. Experimental scenarios are suggested that may provide further evidence.
在从受精卵发育成多细胞生物体的过程中,亚生物体组织的各个层面都会发生大量表观遗传相互作用。这就引发了一种可能性,即表观遗传相互作用系统可能会补偿或“缓冲”其最低层面发生的一些因突变而产生的变化,从而使表型相对于突变更加稳定。这种假设现象将被称为“表观遗传稳定性”。其潜在的重要性源于这样一个事实,即具有遗传基础的表型变异是进化的一个基本前提。因此,表观遗传稳定性的变化可能会深刻影响可实现的进化速率。虽然表观遗传稳定性代表了发育系统的一种系统属性,但它本身可能是由基因决定的,因此可能会发生进化变化。理想情况下,这种情况是否属实应该直接通过实验来回答。但在可预见的未来,所涉及的时间尺度以及我们对发育途径的定量理解不足,可能会排除这种方法。这里通过使用一个具有生化动机的发育途径中一个小但核心部分的模型来寻求初步答案。该模型模拟了一组相互调节彼此表达从而形成稳定基因表达模式的转录调节因子。这种基因表达模式对于确定发育模式形成事件至关重要,很可能受到强烈的稳定自然选择作用。经过长时间的稳定选择后,模型中导致基因表达模式变化的突变比例大幅降低。表观遗传稳定性增加了。在转录因子基因中广泛不同的调控情景下都发现了这种现象。讨论了只有上位性(非线性)基因相互作用才能导致表观遗传稳定性的这种变化。还讨论了来自古生物学、分子进化、发育和遗传学的证据,这些证据与表观遗传稳定性存在变异相一致。概述了表观遗传稳定性与发育稳健性的关系。还提出了可能提供进一步证据的实验情景。