Zebell, Sophia G, Martí-Gómez, Carlos, Fitzgerald, Blaine, Pinto Da Cunha, Camila, Lach, Michael, Seman, Brooke M, Hendelman, Anat, Sretenovic, Simon, Qi, Yiping, Bartlett, Madelaine, Eshed, Yuval, McCandlish, David M, Lippman, Zachary B (February 2025) Cryptic variation fuels plant phenotypic change through hierarchical epistasis. bioRxiv. ISSN 2692-8205 (Public Dataset) (Submitted)
Abstract
Cryptic genetic variants exert minimal or no phenotypic effects alone but have long been hypothesized to form a vast, hidden reservoir of genetic diversity that drives trait evolvability through epistatic interactions. This classical theory has been reinvigorated by pan-genome sequencing, which has revealed pervasive variation within gene families and regulatory networks, including extensive cis-regulatory changes, gene duplication, and divergence between paralogs. Nevertheless, empirical testing of cryptic variation's capacity to fuel phenotypic diversification has been hindered by intractable genetics, limited allelic diversity, and inadequate phenotypic resolution. Here, guided by natural and engineered cis-regulatory cryptic variants in a recently evolved paralogous gene pair, we identified an additional pair of redundant trans regulators, establishing a regulatory network that controls tomato inflorescence architecture. By combining coding mutations with a cis-regulatory allelic series in populations segregating for all four network genes, we systematically constructed a collection of 216 genotypes spanning the full spectrum of inflorescence complexity and quantified branching in over 27,000 inflorescences. Analysis of the resulting high-resolution genotype-phenotype map revealed a layer of dose-dependent interactions within paralog pairs that enhances branching, culminating in strong, synergistic effects. However, we also uncovered an unexpected layer of antagonism between paralog pairs, where accumulating mutations in one pair progressively diminished the effects of mutations in the other. Our results demonstrate how gene regulatory network architecture and complex dosage effects from paralog diversification converge to shape phenotypic space under a hierarchical model of epistatic interactions. Given the prevalence of paralog evolution in genomes, we propose that paralogous cryptic variation within regulatory networks elicits hierarchies of epistatic interactions, catalyzing bursts of phenotypic change. Keyword: cryptic mutations, paralogs, redundancy, cis-regulatory, tomato, inflorescence, gene regulatory network, modeling, epistasis.
Item Type: | Paper |
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Subjects: | bioinformatics bioinformatics > quantitative biology organism description > plant bioinformatics > quantitative biology > quantitative genetics > quantitative epistasis bioinformatics > quantitative biology > quantitative genetics organism description > plant > tomato |
CSHL Authors: | |
Communities: | CSHL labs > Lippman lab CSHL labs > McCandlish lab |
SWORD Depositor: | CSHL Elements |
Depositing User: | CSHL Elements |
Date: | 25 February 2025 |
Date Deposited: | 17 Mar 2025 15:08 |
Last Modified: | 17 Mar 2025 15:08 |
PMCID: | PMC11888316 |
Related URLs: | |
Dataset ID: | |
URI: | https://repository.cshl.edu/id/eprint/41821 |
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