Balancing noise and plasticity in eukaryotic gene expression
Djordje Baji\'c, Juan F. Poyatos

TL;DR
This paper investigates how different genomic regulatory architectures modulate the relationship between gene expression noise and plasticity, revealing distinct mechanisms and trade-offs that influence gene function and genome organization.
Contribution
It identifies alternative gene regulatory architectures that decouple noise and plasticity, highlighting the roles of chromatin regulation, transcript length, and promoter organization.
Findings
Chromatin regulation can lead to plasticity without noise.
Bidirectional promoters reduce noise but also decrease plasticity.
Genome organization influences noise-plasticity coupling.
Abstract
Coupling the control of expression stochasticity (noise) to the ability of expression change (plasticity) can alter gene function and influence adaptation. A number of factors, such as transcription re-initiation, strong chromatin regulation or genome neighboring organization, underlie this coupling. However, these factors do not necessarily combine in equivalent ways and strengths in all genes. Can we identify then alternative architectures that modulate in distinct ways the linkage of noise and plasticity? Here we first show that strong chromatin regulation, commonly viewed as a source of coupling, can lead to plasticity without noise. The nature of this regulation is relevant too, with plastic but noiseless genes being subjected to general activators whereas plastic and noisy genes experience more specific repression. Contrarily, in genes exhibiting poor transcriptional control, it…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGene Regulatory Network Analysis · Genomics and Chromatin Dynamics · Bioinformatics and Genomic Networks
