Mitochondria as environments for the nuclear genome in Drosophila: mitonuclear G×G×E

Author:

Rand David M1ORCID,Mossman James A1,Spierer Adam N1,Santiago John A23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology, Brown University, 80 Waterman Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA

2. Department of Molecular Biology, Cellular Biology, and Biochemistry, Brown University, 80 Waterman Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA

3. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Brown University, 80 Waterman Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA

Abstract

Abstract Mitochondria evolved from a union of microbial cells belonging to distinct lineages that were likely anaerobic. The evolution of eukaryotes required a massive reorganization of the 2 genomes and eventual adaptation to aerobic environments. The nutrients and oxygen that sustain eukaryotic metabolism today are processed in mitochondria through coordinated expression of 37 mitochondrial genes and over 1000 nuclear genes. This puts mitochondria at the nexus of gene-by-gene (G×G) and gene-by-environment (G×E) interactions that sustain life. Here we use a Drosophila model of mitonuclear genetic interactions to explore the notion that mitochondria are environments for the nuclear genome, and vice versa. We construct factorial combinations of mtDNA and nuclear chromosomes to test for epistatic interactions (G×G), and expose these mitonuclear genotypes to altered dietary environments to examine G×E interactions. We use development time and genome-wide RNAseq analyses to assess the relative contributions of mtDNA, nuclear chromosomes, and environmental effects on these traits (mitonuclear G×G×E). We show that the nuclear transcriptional response to alternative mitochondrial “environments” (G×G) has significant overlap with the transcriptional response of mitonuclear genotypes to altered dietary environments. These analyses point to specific transcription factors (e.g., giant) that mediated these interactions, and identified coexpressed modules of genes that may account for the overlap in differentially expressed genes. Roughly 20% of the transcriptome includes G×G genes that are concordant with G×E genes, suggesting that mitonuclear interactions are part of an organism’s environment.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

MIRA

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biotechnology

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