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The economy of chromosomal distances in bacterial gene regulation
Biologynpj Systems Biology and Applications

The economy of chromosomal distances in bacterial gene regulation

E. Cakir, A. Lesne, et al.

Explore groundbreaking research by Eda Cakir, Annick Lesne, and Marc-Thorsten Hütt, which delves into the intriguing dynamics of gene distances in the transcriptional regulatory network of *Escherichia coli*. Their findings suggest that evolutionary pressures favor shorter distances in gene regulation, shedding light on the costs associated with long-distance transcription factors and their implications for bacterial evolution.... show more
Abstract
In the transcriptional regulatory network (TRN) of a bacterium, the nodes are genes and a directed edge represents the action of a transcription factor (TF), encoded by the source gene, on the target gene. It is a condensed representation of a large number of biological observations and facts. Nonrandom features of the network are structural evidence of requirements for a reliable systemic function. For the bacterium Escherichia coli we here investigate the (Euclidean) distances covered by the edges in the TRN when its nodes are embedded in the real space of the circular chromosome. Our work is motivated by ‘wiring economy’ research in Computational Neuroscience and starts from two contradictory hypotheses: (1) TFs are predominantly employed for long-distance regulation, while local regulation is exerted by chromosomal structure, locally coordinated by the action of structural proteins. Hence long distances should often occur. (2) A large distance between the regulator gene and its target requires a higher expression level of the regulator gene due to longer reaching times and ensuing increased degradation (proteolysis) of the TF and hence will be evolutionarily reduced. Our analysis supports the latter hypothesis.
Publisher
npj Systems Biology and Applications
Published On
Dec 15, 2021
Authors
Eda Cakir, Annick Lesne, Marc-Thorsten Hütt
Tags
transcriptional regulatory networkEscherichia coligenetic distanceslong-distance regulationtranscription factorsevolutionary pressurewiring economy
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