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Letter
Nature Genetics  36, 492 - 496 (2004)
Published online: 11 April 2004; | doi:10.1038/ng1340

Gene regulatory network growth by duplication

Sarah A Teichmann & M Madan Babu

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Hills Road, Cambridge CB2 2QH, U.K.

Correspondence should be addressed to Sarah A Teichmann sat@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk or M Madan Babu madanm@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk
We are beginning to elucidate transcriptional regulatory networks on a large scale1 and to understand some of the structural principles of these networks2, 3, but the evolutionary mechanisms that form these networks are still mostly unknown. Here we investigate the role of gene duplication in network evolution. Gene duplication is the driving force for creating new genes in genomes: at least 50% of prokaryotic genes4, 5 and over 90% of eukaryotic genes6 are products of gene duplication. The transcriptional interactions in regulatory networks consist of multiple components, and duplication processes that generate new interactions would need to be more complex. We define possible duplication scenarios and show that they formed the regulatory networks of the prokaryote Escherichia coli and the eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Gene duplication has had a key role in network evolution: more than one-third of known regulatory interactions were inherited from the ancestral transcription factor or target gene after duplication, and roughly one-half of the interactions were gained during divergence after duplication. In addition, we conclude that evolution has been incremental, rather than making entire regulatory circuits or motifs by duplication with inheritance of interactions.


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Nature Genetics
ISSN: 1061-4036
EISSN: 1546-1718
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