Cell Reports (Jun 2014)

Negative Feedback in Genetic Circuits Confers Evolutionary Resilience and Capacitance

  • David C. Marciano,
  • Rhonald C. Lua,
  • Panagiotis Katsonis,
  • Shivas R. Amin,
  • Christophe Herman,
  • Olivier Lichtarge

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.05.018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
pp. 1789 – 1795

Abstract

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Natural selection for specific functions places limits upon the amino acid substitutions a protein can accept. Mechanisms that expand the range of tolerable amino acid substitutions include chaperones that can rescue destabilized proteins and additional stability-enhancing substitutions. Here, we present an alternative mechanism that is simple and uses a frequently encountered network motif. Computational and experimental evidence shows that the self-correcting, negative-feedback gene regulation motif increases repressor expression in response to deleterious mutations and thereby precisely restores repression of a target gene. Furthermore, this ability to rescue repressor function is observable across the Eubacteria kingdom through the greater accumulation of amino acid substitutions in negative-feedback transcription factors compared to genes they control. We propose that negative feedback represents a self-contained genetic canalization mechanism that preserves phenotype while permitting access to a wider range of functional genotypes.