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Transposons, environmental changes, and heritable induced phenotypic variability

Authors :
Laura Fanti
Lucia Piacentini
Gino Palumbo
Sergio Pimpinelli
Valeria Specchia
Maria Pia Bozzetti
Maria Berloco
Piacentini, Lucia
Fanti, Laura
Specchia, Valeria
Bozzetti, Maria Giuseppina
Berloco, Maria
Palumbo, Gioacchino
Pimpinelli, Sergio
Institut Pasteur, Fondation Cenci Bolognetti - Istituto Pasteur Italia, Fondazione Cenci Bolognetti
Réseau International des Instituts Pasteur (RIIP)
Dipartimento di Scienze e Tecnologie Biologiche e Ambientali (DiSTeBA)
Università del Salento [Lecce]
Dipartimento di Biologia
Università degli studi di Bari Aldo Moro (UNIBA)
This work was supported by the Epigenomics Flagship Project EpiGen, The ItalianMinistry of Education and Research,National Research Council and by 'Futuro in Ricerca 2010' no. RBFR10V8K6 from MIUR.
Source :
Chromosoma, Chromosoma, Springer Verlag, 2014, 123 (4), pp.345-54. ⟨10.1007/s00412-014-0464-y⟩
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

International audience; The mechanisms of biological evolution have always been, and still are, the subject of intense debate and modeling. One of the main problems is how the genetic variability is produced and maintained in order to make the organisms adaptable to environmental changes and therefore capable of evolving. In recent years, it has been reported that, in flies and plants, mutations in Hsp90 gene are capable to induce, with a low frequency, many different developmental abnormalities depending on the genetic backgrounds. This has suggested that the reduction of Hsp90 amount makes different development pathways more sensitive to hidden genetic variability. This suggestion revitalized a classical debate around the original Waddington hypothesis of canalization and genetic assimilation making Hsp90 the prototype of morphological capacitor. Other data have also suggested a different mechanism that revitalizes another classic debate about the response of genome to physiological and environmental stress put forward by Barbara McClintock. That data demonstrated that Hsp90 is involved in repression of transposon activity by playing a significant role in piwi-interacting RNA (piRNAs)-dependent RNA interference (RNAi) silencing. The important implication is that the fixed phenotypic abnormalities observed in Hsp90 mutants are probably related to de novo induced mutations by transposon activation. In this case, Hsp90 could be considered as a mutator. In the present theoretical paper, we discuss several possible implications about environmental stress, transposon, and evolution offering also a support to the concept of evolvability.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00095915 and 14320886
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chromosoma, Chromosoma, Springer Verlag, 2014, 123 (4), pp.345-54. ⟨10.1007/s00412-014-0464-y⟩
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....807e1061d2c58a0c179772c9e7d223ff
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00412-014-0464-y⟩