Paralogs in the PKA Regulon Traveled Different Evolutionary Routes to Divergent Expression in Budding Yeast

Author:

Heineike Benjamin M.,El-Samad Hana

Abstract

Functional divergence of duplicate genes, or paralogs, is an important driver of novelty in evolution. In the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, there are 547 paralog gene pairs that survive from an interspecies Whole Genome Hybridization (WGH) that occurred ~100MYA. In this work, we report that ~1/6th (110) of these WGH paralogs pairs (or ohnologs) are differentially expressed with a striking pattern upon Protein Kinase A (PKA) inhibition. One member of each pair in this group has low basal expression that increases upon PKA inhibition, while the other has moderate and unchanging expression. For these genes, expression of orthologs upon PKA inhibition in the non-WGH species Kluyveromyces lactis and for PKA-related stresses in other budding yeasts shows unchanging expression, suggesting that lack of responsiveness to PKA was likely the typical ancestral phenotype prior to duplication. Promoter sequence analysis across related budding yeast species further revealed that the subsequent emergence of PKA-dependence took different evolutionary routes. In some examples, regulation by PKA and differential expression appears to have arisen following the WGH, while in others, regulation by PKA appears to have arisen in one of the two parental lineages prior to the WGH. More broadly, our results illustrate the unique opportunities presented by a WGH event for generating functional divergence by bringing together two parental lineages with separately evolved regulation into one species. We propose that functional divergence of two ohnologs can be facilitated through such regulatory divergence.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate

Chan Zuckerberg Initiative

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

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