Litcius/Paper detail

Genome instability drives epistatic adaptation in the human pathogen <i>Leishmania</i>

Giovanni Bussotti, Laura Piel, Pascale Pescher, Malgorzata A. Domagalska, K. Shanmugha Rajan, Smadar Cohen‐Chalamish, Tirza Doniger, Disha‐Gajanan Hiregange, Peter J. Myler, Ron Unger, Shulamit Michaeli, Gérald F. Späth

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance Chromosome and gene copy number variations often correlate with the evolution of microbial and cancer drug resistance, thus causing important human mortality. How genome instability is harnessed to generate beneficial phenotypes and how deleterious gene dosage effects are compensated remain open questions. The protist pathogen Leishmania exploits genome instability to regulate expression via gene dosage changes. Using these parasites as a unique model system, we uncover complex epistatic interactions between gene copy number variations and compensatory transcriptomic responses as key processes that harness genome instability for adaptive evolution in Leishmania . Our results propose a model of eukaryotic fitness gain that may be broadly applicable to pathogenic fungi or tumor cells known to exploit genome instability for adaptation.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGenome instabilityGeneticsGenomeEpistasisGeneExperimental evolutionGenomicsAdaptation (eye)Genetic FitnessComputational biologyDNADNA damageNeuroscienceEvolution and Genetic DynamicsTrypanosoma species research and implicationsResearch on Leishmaniasis Studies