Evolutionary rewiring of regulatory networks contributes to phenotypic differences between human and mouse orthologous genes

Author:

Ha Doyeon1ORCID,Kim Donghyo1ORCID,Kim Inhae2ORCID,Oh Youngchul1ORCID,Kong JungHo1ORCID,Han Seong Kyu1ORCID,Kim Sanguk134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Life Sciences, Pohang University of Science and Technology , Pohang , Korea

2. ImmunoBiome Inc. , Pohang , Korea

3. Graduate School of Artificial Intelligence, Pohang University of Science and Technology , Pohang , Korea

4. Institute of Convergence Research and Education in Advanced Technology, Yonsei University , Seoul , Korea

Abstract

Abstract Mouse models have been engineered to reveal the biological mechanisms of human diseases based on an assumption. The assumption is that orthologous genes underlie conserved phenotypes across species. However, genetically modified mouse orthologs of human genes do not often recapitulate human disease phenotypes which might be due to the molecular evolution of phenotypic differences across species from the time of the last common ancestor. Here, we systematically investigated the evolutionary divergence of regulatory relationships between transcription factors (TFs) and target genes in functional modules, and found that the rewiring of gene regulatory networks (GRNs) contributes to the phenotypic discrepancies that occur between humans and mice. We confirmed that the rewired regulatory networks of orthologous genes contain a higher proportion of species-specific regulatory elements. Additionally, we verified that the divergence of target gene expression levels, which was triggered by network rewiring, could lead to phenotypic differences. Taken together, a careful consideration of evolutionary divergence in regulatory networks could be a novel strategy to understand the failure or success of mouse models to mimic human diseases. To help interpret mouse phenotypes in human disease studies, we provide quantitative comparisons of gene expression profiles on our website (http://sbi.postech.ac.kr/w/RN).

Funder

Korean National Research Foundation

Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries

IITP

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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