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Nature 452, 840-845 (17 April 2008) | doi:10.1038/nature06847;

Open Innovation Challenges

Evolvability and hierarchy in rewired bacterial gene networks

Sequencing DNA from several organisms has revealed that duplication and drift of existing genes have primarily moulded the contents of a given genome. Though the effect of knocking out or overexpressing a particular gene has been studied in many organisms, no study has systematically explored the effect of adding new links in a biological network. To explore network evolvability, we constructed 598 recombinations of promoters (including regulatory regions) with different transcription or |[sgr]|-factor genes in Escherichia coli, added over a wild-type genetic background. Here we show that |[sim]|95% of new networks are tolerated by the bacteria, that very few alter growth, and that expression level correlates with factor position in the wild-type network hierarchy. Most importantly, we find that certain networks consistently survive over the wild type under various selection pressures. Therefore new links in the network are rarely a barrier for evolution and can even confer a fitness advantage.

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