Natural Variation in Gene Expression Modulates the Severity of Mutant Phenotypes: Cell Ovarian Cancer and Us OVARIAN CANCER and US Ovarian Cancer and Us

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Thursday, July 16, 2015

Natural Variation in Gene Expression Modulates the Severity of Mutant Phenotypes: Cell



abstract

Highlights

  • Comparison of loss-of-function phenotypes of 1,400 genes in two C. elegans isolates
  • ∼20% of genes have different loss-of-function phenotypes in two individuals
  • Differences in severity of mutant phenotypes predictable from expression

Summary

Many mutations cause genetic disorders. However, two people inheriting the same mutation often have different severity of symptoms, and this is partly genetic. The effects of genetic background on mutant phenotypes are poorly understood, but predicting them is critical for personalized medicine. To study this phenomenon comprehensively and systematically, we used RNAi to compare loss-of-function phenotypes for ∼1,400 genes in two isolates of C. elegans and find that ∼20% of genes differ in the severity of phenotypes in these two genetic backgrounds. Crucially, this effect of genetic background on the severity of both RNAi and mutant phenotypes can be predicted from variation in the expression levels of the affected gene. This is also true in mammalian cells, suggesting it is a general property of genetic networks. We suggest that differences in the manifestation of mutant phenotypes between individuals are largely the result of natural variation in gene expression.

 http://www.cell.com/cms/attachment/2034518047/2050018969/fx1.jpg

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