Soham Dibyachintan
@sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
110 followers 420 following 13 posts
Ph.D. student Landry Lab gene duplication, cell signaling, protein evolution, full time member of the APOYG cult
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Reposted by Soham Dibyachintan
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
n summary:
Cryptic genetic variation — both regulatory and coding variation— biases the future of redundant gene duplicates by altering the effects of new mutations (12/12) #evolution #epistasis #genetics
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
Our work underscores the importance of historical contingency in molecular evolution. Redundant paralogs are not evolutionary blank slates — they are subtly shaped by past substitutions and regulatory shifts that influence their future evolution (11/12)
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
Thus, cryptic divergence alters the functional landscape of gene duplicates. A mutation that is benign in one paralog can be deleterious in the other, thereby shaping asymmetric evolutionary trajectories and biasing the potential for subfunctionalization or loss of one of the paralogs (10/12)
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
To explore the origin of this divergence in effects, we introduced historical substitutions from one paralog into the other individually and in pairs. We found strong evidence of pairwise epistasis: certain mutations only impacted function in specific sequence contexts (9/12)
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
Approximately 15% of mutations showed divergence in functional effects between domains, which we refer to as contingent mutations, even when both domains were expressed at the same levels. These mutations were enriched at solvent-exposed, consistent with roles in binding specificity (8/12)
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
Not all mutations were globally destabilizing for all interactions. Some selectively impaired binding to a single interaction partner, suggesting that such changes could lead to subfunctionalization — the partitioning of ancestral functions between paralogs (7/12)
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
By swapping the SH3 domains between the two paralogs, we found that the expression level alone can modulate the severity of binding impairment. A mutation's impact is not fixed — it depends on the expression level of the protein in which it occurs (6/12)
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
We found the divergence in functional effects arose from two main sources:
1. Regulatory divergence — MYO5 is more highly expressed than MYO3, buffering it against deleterious mutations
2. Sequence divergence — cryptic amino acid substitutions that modulate mutational effects via epistasis (5/12)
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
We found that many mutations exhibited paralog-specific effects. Identical substitutions in the two SH3 domains led to divergent impacts on binding, demonstrating that even functionally redundant domains diverge in their evolutionary potential (4/12)
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
We combined saturated mutagenesis and CRISPR with high-throughput phenotyping of SH3 domains of MYO3 and MYO5 in S. cerevisiae, introducing all possible single amino acid substitutions, and assessed how these variants affected binding to 8 biologically relevant protein interaction partners (3/12)
sohamdibyachintan.bsky.social
Although paralogs like myosin-3 (MYO3) and myosin-5 (MYO5) often retain redundant functions, they gradually accumulate subtle changes in expression and sequence that do not immediately impact function, a phenomenon called cryptic divergence (2/12)