Intraspecific evolution of the intercellular signaling network underlying a robust developmental system (original) (raw)
- Josselin Milloz,
- Fabien Duveau,
- Isabelle Nuez, and
- Marie-Anne Félix1
- Institut Jacques Monod, CNRS-University Denis Diderot-Paris 7-UPMC, 75251 Paris cedex 05, France
Abstract
Many biological systems produce an invariant output when faced with stochastic or environmental variation. This robustness of system output to variation affecting the underlying process may allow for “cryptic” genetic evolution within the system without change in output. We studied variation of cell fate patterning of Caenorhabditis elegans vulva precursors, a developmental system that relies on a simple intercellular signaling network and yields an invariant output of cell fates and lineages among C. elegans wild isolates. We first investigated the system’s genetic variation in C. elegans by means of genetic tools and cell ablation to break down its buffering mechanisms. We uncovered distinct architectures of quantitative variation along the Ras signaling cascade, including compensatory variation, and differences in cell sensitivity to induction along the anteroposterior axis. In the unperturbed system, we further found variation between isolates in spatio-temporal dynamics of Ras pathway activity, which can explain the phenotypic differences revealed upon perturbation. Finally, the variation mostly affects the signaling pathways in a tissue-specific manner. We thus demonstrate and characterize microevolution of a developmental signaling network. In addition, our results suggest that the vulva genetic screens would have yielded a different mutation spectrum, especially for Wnt pathway mutations, had they been performed in another C. elegans genetic background.
Footnotes
↵1 Corresponding author.
↵1 E-MAIL felix{at}ijm.jussieu.fr; FAX 33-1-44-27-52-65.Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.
Article is online at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.495308.
- Received June 30, 2008.
- Accepted August 29, 2008.
Copyright © 2008, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press