Abstract
Mendelian inheritance is a fundamental law of genetics. Considering two alleles in a diploid, a phenotype of a heterotype is dominated by a particular homotype according to the law of dominance. This picture is usually based on simple genotype-phenotype mapping in which one gene regulates one phenotype. However, in reality, some interactions between genes can result in deviation from Mendelian dominance.
Here, by using the numerical evolution of diploid gene regulatory networks (GRNs), we discuss whether Mendelian dominance evolves beyond the classical case of one-to-one genotype-phenotype mapping. We examine whether complex genotype-phenotype mapping can achieve Mendelian dominance through the evolution of the GRN with interacting genes. Specifically, we extend the GRN model to a diploid case, in which two GRN matrices are added to give gene expression dynamics, and simulate evolution with meiosis and recombination. Our results reveal that Mendelian dominance evolves even under complex genotype-phenotype mapping. This dominance is achieved via a group of genotypes that differ from each other but have a common phenotype given by the expression of target genes. Calculating the degree of dominance shows that it increases through the evolution, correlating closely with the decrease in phenotypic fluctuations and the increase in robustness to initial noise. This evolution of Mendelian dominance is associated with phenotypic robustness against meiosis-induced genome mixing, whereas sexual recombination arising from the mixing of chromosomes from the parents further enhances dominance and robustness. Owing to this dominance, the robustness to genetic differences increases, while the optimal fitness is sustained up to a large difference between the two genomes. In summary, Mendelian dominance is achieved by groups of genotypes that are associated with the increase in phenotypic robustness to noise.
Author summary Mendelian dominance is one of the most fundamental laws in genetics. When two conflicting characters occur in a single diploid, the dominant character is always chosen. Assuming that one gene makes one character, this law is simple to grasp. However, in reality, phenotypes are generated via interactions between several genes, which may alter Mendel’s dominance law. The evolution of robustness to noise and mutations has been investigated extensively using complex expression dynamics with gene regulatory networks. Here, we applied gene-expression dynamics with complex interactions to the case of a diploid and simulated the evolution of the gene regulatory network to generate the optimal phenotype given by a certain gene expression pattern. Interestingly, after evolution, Mendelian dominance is achieved via a group of genes. This group-based Mendelian dominance is shaped by phenotype insensitivity to genome mixing by meiosis and evolves concurrently with the robustness to noise. By focusing on the influence of phenotypic robustness, which has received considerable attention recently, our result provides a novel perspective as to why Mendel’s law of dominance is commonly observed.
Footnotes
↵* okubo{at}complex.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp (KO); kaneko{at}complex.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp (KK)