(C) PLOS One [1]. This unaltered content originally appeared in journals.plosone.org. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. url:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/licenses-and-copyright ------------ The good, the bad, and the ugly: Evolutionary and pathological aspects of gene dosage alterations ['M. Felicia Basilicata', 'Institute Of Molecular Biology', 'Imb', 'Mainz', 'Claudia Isabelle Keller Valsecchi'] Date: 2022-01 Diploid organisms contain a maternal and a paternal genome complement that is thought to provide robustness and allow developmental progression despite genetic perturbations that occur in heterozygosity. However, changes affecting gene dosage from the chromosome down to the individual gene level possess a significant pathological potential and can lead to developmental disorders (DDs). This indicates that expression from a balanced gene complement is highly relevant for proper cellular and organismal function in eukaryotes. Paradoxically, gene and whole chromosome duplications are a principal driver of evolution, while heteromorphic sex chromosomes (XY and ZW) are naturally occurring aneuploidies important for sex determination. Here, we provide an overview of the biology of gene dosage at the crossroads between evolutionary benefit and pathogenicity during disease. We describe the buffering mechanisms and cellular responses to alterations, which could provide a common ground for the understanding of DDs caused by copy number alterations. Introduction In sexually reproducing eukaryotes, genes are typically present in 2-fold, a maternal and a paternal complement. A characteristic feature of this balanced karyotype is that the chromosomes are present in proportional amounts with respect to each other. The relative copy number of a gene in the genome is referred to as gene dosage. Changes in gene dosage proportionally reflect on RNA and protein products and thereby carry the potential to affect cellular processes in which they play a role, both in a detrimental or beneficial fashion. Aneuploidy refers to an imbalanced chromosome complement and is only rarely tolerated during embryonic development. It is a principal factor of implantation failure and perinatal lethality in humans with the notable exception of trisomy of chromosome 21, where affected individuals have a life expectancy of about 60 years [1]. Gene dosage changes can also occur naturally, for example, in the form of polyploidy, which is a widespread phenomenon in plants and also found in fishes, amphibians, reptiles, and insects [2]. Another example are heteromorphic sex chromosomes, where degeneration of the Y/W can result in only a single functional allele being present in the heterogametic sex. In some organisms, the resulting reduction in expression of sex-linked genes is reequilibrated by a mechanism termed “dosage compensation” (DC) [3]. Albeit these chromosome-wide examples are probably the most well-known ones, gene dosage alterations can occur at any level, from the mega-base scale down to the individual gene. Whole chromosomes can be gained or lost, parts of chromosomes containing one or many genes can be amplified or deleted, and, furthermore, one of the 2 gene copies can be inactivated by heterozygous mutations. Recent advances in diagnostics by next generation sequencing (NGS) brought forward a growing number of rare developmental disorders (DDs) caused by de novo variants in single genes [4]. Large-scale sequencing efforts of the healthy population, in turn, revealed that at least 20% of the human coding genome is highly intolerant to heterozygous mutation [5,6]. This emphasizes that gene dosage imbalance has a much bigger impact for human health than anticipated. Here, we provide an overview of the evolutionary and pathological aspects of gene dosage alterations and their impact on the outcome of development (Fig 1). Building on the knowledge about sex chromosome regulation, we discuss other forms of expression imbalances, the associated perturbations of molecular and cellular networks as well as response mechanisms. For an in-depth discussion of the diverse facets of gene dosage related to cancer, we refer to recent reviews [7,8]. PPT PowerPoint slide PNG larger image TIFF original image Download: Fig 1. Overview of chromosome-wide to gene-by-gene dosage alterations. Artistic representation of the beneficial and the disadvantageous aspects of gene dosage alterations. Examples of naturally occurring and disease-causing phenomena are shown in the illustration. Such gene dosage alterations can occur from any level, from the chromosome-wide, i.e., mega-base scale, down to the individual gene level, i.e., a single-nucleotide change. Dosage can be modulated by genetic and epigenetic mechanisms. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009906.g001 Chromosome-wide dosage alterations: Aneuploidies and sex chromosomes The importance of maintaining appropriate gene dosage balance was noted by Blakeslee and colleagues in their experiments performed in the 1920s with the plant Datura stramonium. He found that in a balanced genome, addition of a single chromosome leads to detrimental effects. Whole genome duplication by hybridization instead did not cause phenotypic changes [9]. Similar findings were later obtained in, e.g., other plants, fruit flies, yeast [10–12], and humans. A systematic analysis of segmental aneuploidies in fruit flies revealed that viability and fertility are compromised when the heterozygous deletion spans approximately 1% of the genome. Heterozygosity from 3% up to entire chromosomes results in embryonic lethality [11,13]. Tissue-specific aneuploidies promote a variety of phenotypes in the fruit fly, including a decreased life span, defects of the nervous system, or perturbed stem cell proliferation [14–16]. In mice, highly aneuploid embryonic stem cells fail to contribute to all tissues of the adult chimera including the germline [17]. Aneuploidy in plants can lead to leaf knotting, aberrant branching, growth defects, and general developmental delay [18,19]. Aneuploid budding yeast exhibits proliferative defects, alterations in cell division and cell cycle kinetics, plasma membrane stress, defects in responding to environmental perturbations [20,21], and are accompanied by the induction of a general stress response, proteotoxicity, and genome instability [8] (Box 1). Thus, aneuploidies and the associated imbalances can negatively affect cellular and organismal fitness and are often not tolerated during development. Box 1. Cellular and molecular responses upon aneuploidy The gene expression changes after chromosomes become aneuploid can trigger alterations in cellular function. Traditionally, it was assumed that such responses are gene specific, and, hence, the cellular consequences upon aneuploidy differ depending on which genomic region exhibits a copy number change. However, it is important to note that aneuploidy also triggers global physiological and molecular effects, regardless of which specific chromosome and encoded genes are involved [10,11,21]. It has been suggested that by affecting many genes simultaneously, aneuploidy is an extra burden for cellular machineries such as the proteostasis network, which is responsible for maintaining the proper balance of protein synthesis, folding, transport, and degradation [57]. Aneuploidy can disrupt cellular metabolism due to a higher metabolic demand linked to increased nucleotide, protein, and lipid synthesis. Besides this “extra work” aspect, overdosage of balanced protein complexes [114] but also unpaired multisubunit complexes can cause aggregation of proteins, which provides an alternative route to protein degradation to respond to gene dosage imbalance [115] (also see Fig 3). However, there are interesting physiological exceptions: Aneuploidy appears to be part of a developmental program of the mammalian liver and brain [2,22]. Another naturally tolerated aneuploidy are the heteromorphic sex chromosomes (XX/XY and ZZ/ZW), which are present in many sexually reproducing organisms and evolve from regular autosomes [23] (Fig 2, top left). According to Ohno, correction of the expression imbalances due to X chromosome monosomy versus autosomes requires an up-regulation by 2-fold. He also postulated that in order to balance differences between sexes and to achieve complete DC, females would require X chromosome inactivation [24]. With regard to the current usage of the DC term, it is helpful to consider these 2 sides of the coin of Ohno’s hypothesis: X-to-autosome balance versus X-to-X balance between the sexes (Fig 2, bottom; also see [25]). PPT PowerPoint slide PNG larger image TIFF original image Download: Fig 2. Sex chromosomes and DC. (Top left) Sex chromosomes are highly dynamic and show recurrent turnovers illustrated by gray arrows. They typically evolve from a pair of regular autosomes after acquisition of a sex-determining locus. Recombination starts to be repressed and the future Y (in the case of a male heterogametic species) or W (in the case of a female heterogametic species) acquire more and more protein truncating mutations. This process results in gradual functional heterozygosity of the X or Z chromosome (pink). In some organisms, the sex chromosomes then become fully degenerated and are sometimes even entirely lost, but there are also many species, where sex chromosomes do not decay [37]. Despite degeneration, some genes can be retained [41] or even become expanded on the degenerating Y/W [108]. (Top right) Evolutionary tree showing multiple species across the animal and plant kingdom, where DC has been studied. XY and ZW sex chromosome systems are colored in blue and orange, respectively, and the presence of chromosome-wide versus gene by gene/absence of DC are illustrated with black and gray boxes. Pictograms (images: phylopic.org) are only shown for illustrative purposes and do not depict the actual species in the tree; also see references and comments in S1 File. (Bottom) Comparison of the 3 known molecular mechanisms achieving DC by up-regulation of the X in males (Drosophila), inactivation of the X in females (mammals) or dampening of the 2 X by half in hermaphrodites (nematodes) are compared in the table. In Drosophila, both X-to-autosome as well as male-to-female DC is reached. Mammalian females undergo X chromosome inactivation, where besides selection to correct for dosage imbalance, sexual antagonism has been proposed as an alternative mechanism shaping X inactivation during evolution [109]. Whether the remaining, active X and the single male X are globally up-regulated by 2-fold remains ambiguous to date. While transcriptional mechanisms have been broadly investigated [110–112], a recent study comparing different vertebrates suggests that this second level of compensation according to Ohno’s hypothesis is achieved via translational regulation [113]. DC, dosage compensation. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009906.g002 Only 3 molecular pathways to achieve DC have been characterized in detail: the ones operating in mammals, fruit flies, and nematodes (for reviews, see [3,26,27]). Of note, the macromolecular complexes and associated transcription level changes in these species are entirely distinct (Fig 2, bottom). Phenotypically, the genetic loss of the factors promoting DC result in sex-specific lethality at larval stages in Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster [28,29]. In mice, depending on the genetic allele investigated, lethality manifests either during embryonic stages or at weaning [30,31]. Whether these phenotypes are a consequence of imbalance of selected dosage-sensitive genes or reflect a particular sensitivity of these species to an aneuploid chromosome remains only poorly characterized to date, especially with regard to the temporal and tissue-specific requirements of DC. Besides these model organisms, the presence or absence of DC has been documented in many other species encompassing not only the animal, but also the plant kingdom (Fig 2, top right; S1 File) [32]. Across taxa, there can be a remarkable complexity and diversity of the associated mechanisms. For example, the two dipterans Anopheles and Drosophila achieve X chromosome up-regulation in males by entirely different mechanisms, although the same ancestral autosome evolved to a sex chromosome [33], and the same ancestral segment turning into a sex chromosome is compensated in XY anolis lizards but not the ZW softshell turtle [34]. DC can be regulated depending on developmental stage, tissue, and age: In the parasite Schistoma mansoni, the Z chromosome is fully compensated in only the free, cercaria stage, but not in its parasitic, intravertebrate stage [35] (also see an interesting example of tissue-specific DC in turtles [36]). Many organisms do not display chromosome-wide expression equalization of sex chromosomes [37]. In chicken, which possesses a ZZ/ZW sex determination system, only few dosage-sensitive genes are subjected to DC [38,39], and the snake Z chromosome lacks chromosome-wide DC, too [40]. DC may not be necessary, if dosage balance is maintained by keeping 2 functional copies in both sexes, for example, via the “survival” of especially dosage-sensitive genes on the degenerating W or Y [41,42]. An emerging picture is that chromosome-wide DC occurs much more frequently in XY systems, while it is comparably rare in ZW species [25,43]. This discrepancy is unrelated to the evolutionary age of the sex chromosome system [44], and models indicate that it could rather be a consequence of stronger sexual selection in males, which is the heterogametic sex in XY systems [45]. An expression disequilibrium of X/Z-linked genes cannot only occur in the cases where chromosome-wide DC is absent. Some mammalian genes referred to as escapees, for example, the Histone demethylase gene Kdm6a, may get expressed from the inactivated female X. Predominantly, such escape is not constitutive, but depends on developmental stage, tissue type, or genetic background of the individual [46] and appears to be much more prevalent in humans compared to, e.g., mice [47]. Since the second, inactive X is only present in females, one could regard it as an additional “reservoir” providing a potential advantage with regard to allelic diversity and gene dosage [48]. Understanding phenotypic consequences of mutations in genes that can escape X chromosome inactivation is therefore an important field of research [49] highlighting the significance of sex chromosome dosage balancing in physiology and disease. Gene expression changes upon autosomal aneuploidy Is there a DC mechanism akin to the X chromosome when autosomes become aneuploid [50]? In human fibroblasts obtained from individuals with trisomy of chromosome 21, 13, and 18, mRNA and protein levels are typically increased to the expected value of 1.5-fold [51]. Similar effects are observed in fibroblasts obtained from mice with Robertsonian translocations, where gene expression increases proportional to gene copy number [52]. By contrast, segmental aneuploidies in Drosophila were reported to experience DC [53,54]. Nonetheless, compensation does not always appear to be complete, as a 2-fold change in DNA typically results in about a 1.5-fold increase in gene expression [55,56]. Saccharomyces cerevisiae, in turn, seems again similar to mammals, where gene expression differences correspondingly scale with the affected chromosome and are not compensated [10,57]. This is also reflected at the proteome level [58], where, however, some protein level buffering counteracting the gene dosage alteration can be detected [21]. Autosomal aneuploidies can also impact the expression of other genes in trans, for example, if the region originally affected by a copy number change harbors a transcription factor or a microRNA gene [59]. A study in maize found that cis-specific up-regulation caused by a segmental trisomy occurs in a tissue invariant fashion, while trans-effects appeared rather tissue specific [18]. One aspect to consider for these seemingly distinct outcomes concerning aneuploidy-induced DC might be that such a mechanism needs time to be established on affected chromosomes after the alteration has occurred. The expression data for segmental aneuploidies have been generated from adult flies [53,54], and, hence, its establishment along embryogenesis and the larval stages remains unclear. Furthermore, different yeast cells display a great degree of nongenetic phenotypic variability in cellular responses right after the induction of the very same chromosomal alteration, which is also an intriguing phenotypic manifestation of mice with Robertsonian translocations [21,58]. Variability might be an instant response, which then might get canalized into a more stable form of autosomal DC. If a “noncanonical” form of DC indeed exists for autosomes, it will be interesting to unravel similarities and differences to the features acting on the X-chromosome: How are the affected chromosomes and genes recognized and distinguished from the euploid population? Are DC mechanisms acting on genes individually, or does a universal regulation occur at a chromosome-wide scale, irrespective of the nature or function of the single gene? In the absence of a universal “autosome-DC” pathway, feedback mechanisms could provide a means for how subtle expression perturbations could be propagated into regulatory networks [60,61]. Another interesting aspect of autosomal DC is how precision for an approximately 2-fold effect could be achieved. Addressing such questions could be key to understanding the diverse facets of aneuploidy during development and disease. Dosage alterations at the individual gene level Dosage alterations do not only occur chromosome wide but also at the other end of the spectrum: the individual gene level (Fig 1). Recent efforts by human exome and genome sequencing consortia probably provide the most compelling view on this aspect in a natural population. The Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC) and Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD) studies found that the human genome displays a high degree of selection against nearly all classes of structural variants affecting single genes, with the interesting exception of copy gains [62]. The latter finding is in agreement with gene duplication events being a key process in evolution (Box 2) [63,64], although they can be sometimes associated with negative phenotypic consequences. A single Drosophila locus (Tpl) causes lethality when present in either 3 copies or a single copy [11,65]. In humans, duplications and heterozygous deletions of the cohesin loading factor NIPBL lead to intellectual disability, developmental delay, craniofacial defects, and limb malformations [66,67]. By integrating information on copy numbers in 753,994 human individuals, a recent study produced a more comprehensive dataset including a statistical model to predict dosage sensitivity, which defined 3,006 haploinsufficient and 295 triplosensitive genes [68]. Thus, single copy gains are not always strongly deleterious, and its effects appear generally less pronounced and subtle compared to the corresponding gene losses. This is in agreement with the stoichiometric perturbations upon gene duplication (3:2 copies) being less pronounced than upon deletion (1:2 copies). Box 2. Gene-by-gene dosage alterations and evolution Gene duplications are crucial to the evolution of novel genes and regulatory elements, because they create redundancy, which liberates DNA sequences from previous selective constraints. Duplicated copies, whereupon they are referred to as gene paralogues, can arise by (1) tandem and segmental duplication upon DNA rearrangements; (2) retrotransposition; and (3) whole genome duplication [116]. Whole genome duplications are observed several times throughout eukaryotic evolution and provide a balanced increase in ploidy. They are typically unstable and followed by widespread gene loss, for example, by obtaining damaging mutations referred to as pseudogenization [117]. Paralogues that are maintained from whole genome duplication receive a special name, so-called Ohnologues [64]. Examples of paralogue functions can be found in almost any species and virtually all aspects of biology. Human-specific gene duplication events coincide with and were proposed to be causally involved in the beginning of the neocortex expansion [118]. Compared to animals, plants have comparably higher duplication rates. Polyploidy as well as the retention of stress response genes may facilitate their rapid adaptation to changing environments [119–121]. From a dosage point of view, the counterpart of beneficial gene duplications are natural examples of monoallelism, which induce functional hemizygosity at the gene-by-gene level. There are 2 major categories of monoallelism: (1) genetic, where changes to the primary DNA sequence result in only a single allele being able to make a functional protein; and (2) epigenetic, where both parental alleles are present and per se functional, but only one is transcribed, whereas the other one is silenced. Allelic exclusion belongs to the first category and allows only a single type of antigen receptor genes to be expressed in B cells and T cells. Nonfunctional Ig and TCR alleles are created by incomplete or nonproductive V(D)J recombination (Fig 1). The phenomenon of genomic imprinting belongs to the second category of “epigenetic monoallelism.” For imprinted genes, the allele choice is nonrandom and occurs in a parent of origin–specific manner [122]. A well-studied example is the IGF2 gene, which is exclusively expressed from the paternal genome and is important for fetal growth and development of various tissues such as the placenta or the brain [123]. Monoallelic expression is also found in olfactory sensory neurons, where only a single, but in this case randomly chosen, olfactory receptor (OR) gene is expressed. The monogenic and monoallelic expression enables defined olfactory perception of odors in the olfactory epithelium [124]. Cells in the immune and nervous system appear to employ monoallelism to ensure a high degree of cellular diversity and individuality. Although random monoallelic expression was described to occur on other autosomal genes, the functional relevance of this phenomenon could not be unambiguously resolved to date [125–129]. Heterozygous mutations can sometimes produce detrimental gain-of-function alleles, but when they reduce gene function and cause an associated decrease in organismal fitness, this is referred to as haploinsufficiency. One of the first systematic characterizations of haploinsufficiency was conducted in Drosophila, which revealed a few dozen Minute loci. In heterozygosity, they display aberrant bristles, compromised viability and fertility as well as altered developmental timing [69]. Such developmental phenotypes caused by heterozygous variants are also prevalent in humans, where they frequently lead to rare disorders [4]. Based on the probability of genetic variation obtained in ExAC and gnomAD, the fraction of human haploinsufficient genes is estimated to reach approximately 20% [5]. Using the yeast knockout collection, it was found that heterozygous deletion of about 3% of the budding yeast genes respond with defects in cell proliferation in optimal growth conditions [70], but this fraction increases to 20% in different growth conditions [71]. Interestingly, when morphological features are analyzed, 75% of essential genes in yeast showed a phenotype in heterozygosity [72]. Thus, haploinsufficiency is apparently context dependent and (not only in yeast) influenced by environmental conditions or nutrient supply. This is further complicated by the fact that most haploinsufficiency phenotypes are associated with variable expressivity (i.e., the phenotypes differ among affected individuals) and show reduced penetrance (i.e., some individuals show phenotypes, while others are seemingly unaffected) and, hence, can be difficult to detect and study. What are the common attributes of such genes where dosage appears to be so critical? One immediate effect of hemizygosity is that (in absence of a buffering mechanism, see below) lower amounts are being produced, which may be important where the gene product is rate limiting (Fig 3). Accordingly, some yeast haploinsufficiency genes were found to function in metabolic processes, and these effects can be alleviated by slowing the growth rate in minimal media [70]. Expression from a single allele, instead of two, was also proposed to increase transcription noise and cause stochastic delays and interruptions of gene expression [73,74]. Another explanation is not the reduced expression per se but alterations in stoichiometry [75,76]. Dosage-sensitive genes are generally more likely to be found in multisubunit protein complexes [77], and, indeed, many of the Minute phenotypes were found to be caused by loss-of-function alleles for ribosomal proteins [78]. Under this dosage balance hypothesis, both reduction as well as overexpression of a given gene are expected to lead to fitness defects, and rebalancing the expression of the interaction partners should alleviate such effects. For example, lethality by expressing an extra copy of beta tubulin can be rescued by providing an extra copy of alpha tubulin [79]. A recent study has analyzed the contribution of these mechanisms more systematically and investigated the effects of single-copy losses and gains of each yeast gene. This brought forward that there is no single, universal explanation for haploinsufficiency, and all of the aforementioned possibilities contribute to the organismal fitness defects [80]. In the light of the striking prevalence of haploinsufficiency in humans [5,6], studying gene dosage in the context of cellular morphology [72] and from a multicellular point of view is a pressing issue in order to understand its relevance for genome evolution and disease manifestation. PPT PowerPoint slide PNG larger image TIFF original image Download: Fig 3. Molecular consequences upon gene dosage alterations. If gene dosage alterations reduce gene quantity, insufficient amounts of a protein (blue chain) can be produced (top). If the affected protein is rate limiting, for example, an enzyme, this can lead to fitness defects. Increases and reductions in gene quantity can also result in disrupted stoichiometry (bottom), if the affected protein (blue chain) interacts with other cellular macromolecules (illustrated as a complex consisting of a dimeric subunit A (purple), a dimeric subunit C (yellow) and the affected protein functioning as a bridge subunit B (blue)). This can lead to (a) change in the amount of functional complexes; (b) aggregation of uncomplexed subunits; and (c) overload of the chaperones and proteostasis network. Copy number increases can also lead to the aggregation of the protein products simply by reaching a critical, abnormally high concentration, promoting pathological transitions due to the protein’s physical properties. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009906.g003 Robustness and buffering between alleles and paralogues For human genetic disorders, understanding the cross talk between alleles and paralogous genes (Box 2) is of particular interest, because unlocking their potential could provide a compensatory mechanism for genetic or environmental perturbations. For example, CRISPR-mediated activation of the remaining functional copy can rescue obesity caused by Sim1 haploinsufficiency in mice [81]. Compensatory up-regulation can also be intrinsic and a consequence of genetic robustness, i.e., the capacity of an organism to withstand harmful mutations [82]. The Resilience Project, for example, uncovered several human individuals with mutations in Mendelian disease genes, which surprisingly did not show any of the severe clinical symptoms commonly associated with that particular mutation [83]. In the case of a heterozygous mutation, an obvious mechanism is the up-regulation of the unaffected allele. In Nipbl+/- mutant mice, Nipbl transcript levels are only reduced by 25% to 30% instead of 50%, indicative of a compensatory up-regulation from the wild-type allele. This compensation is thought to contribute to the degree and severity of phenotype manifestation [84]. How can such regulatory loops work at the molecular level? Complex autoregulatory and cross-regulatory loops occur, for example, in the genes encoding proteins functioning in RNA splicing such as the SR genes. Those undergo alternative splicing, where productive splicing results in a full-length SR protein to be produced, while inclusion of an early in-frame stop codon-containing “poison exon” triggers RNA decay [85]. Thereby, protein level alterations of spliceosomal components and regulatory proteins affect the production of alternative splice variants from their own corresponding genes, and this ensures maintaining their appropriate levels. Another form of responsiveness and cross talk that can occur upon gene mutation is the acquisition of secondary mutations. In a yeast study, the independent knockout of the same gene was shown to frequently evolve mutations in the very same secondary gene [86]. More recently, the exciting finding was made that mutant mRNA degradation can trigger a more general cellular response upon genetic perturbations [87,88]. This mechanism is referred to as genetic compensation and provides a form of robustness, which differs from the aforementioned examples. It is a general mechanism that occurs upstream of the protein product, i.e., is independent of the protein sequence or function the affected gene encodes. With these features, it is conceptually similar to the X chromosome DC mechanism discussed above (Fig 4). PPT PowerPoint slide PNG larger image TIFF original image Download: Fig 4. Comparison of genetic compensation and X chromosome DC. The illustration shows the genetic compensation mechanism, where a premature termination codon in the DNA, produces an RNA, which is exported to the cytoplasm. Upon translation, the premature termination codon-containing transcript is recognized as “faulty” by the NMD pathway and degraded. It is assumed that the degradation products (small RNAs?) can signal back to the corresponding locus in the nucleus, which promotes an increase of Histone H3 Lysine 4 trimethylation (H3K4me3) at the promoter of the (a) unaffected allele; and (b) of gene paralogues that have sequence similarity to the original locus. This can then enhance transcription, which functionally rescues the effects of the original mutation. In Drosophila DC, noncoding RNAs are produced in cis from the hemizygous X chromosome in males. This induces the recruitment of the MSL2 protein of the MSL complex. The MSL complex acetylates Histone H4 Lysine 16 (H4K16ac), which triggers the chromatin decompaction and promotes transcription of expressed genes on the X. DC, dosage compensation; NMD, nonsense mediated decay. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009906.g004 Genetic compensation occurs for transcripts harboring a premature termination codon. This can trigger the up-regulation of the remaining allele and paralogous genes that can functionally substitute for the defective copy. Up-regulation is dependent on the nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) pathway and is associated with the enrichment of histone H3 Lysine 4 trimethylation at the promoter regions of the compensatory genes. This pathway exists in at least mouse [87], zebrafish [89], and C. elegans [90] and may provide an explanation for the fact that incomplete penetrance of genetic mutations is relatively common [91]. Genetic compensation may be triggered by small RNA degradation products, which could serve as guide molecules and target chromatin-modifying complexes by complementary base pairing to nascent transcripts of the affected gene loci [92,93]. Another possibility is that a response similar to the RNAa mechanism is elicited, where promoter-targeted microRNAs (miRNAs) activate transcription [94]. Furthermore, pairing of homologous sequences and chromosomes may be another mechanism through which alleles would be able to “cross talk.” An inherent feature of the NMD pathway is that it requires translation and depends on the position of a premature termination codon with regard to the exon junction. Hence, genetic compensation is unable to be triggered from complete deletions or duplicates created by retrotransposition, since they are created via a cDNA intermediate where the exon–intron structure is lost. The prevalence of genetic compensation triggered by premature termination codons and its importance for the manifestation of DD in humans remain unexplored to date, but it may be one explanation for the reduced penetrance and variable expressivity of haploinsufficient genes. [END] [1] Url: https://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1009906 (C) Plos One. "Accelerating the publication of peer-reviewed science." 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