Adrien Henry ab , Françoise Monéger c , Areejit Samal* ad and Olivier C. Martin* ab
Molecular Biosystems 9 (2013) 1726-1735
The reconstruction of many biological networks has allowed detailed studies of their structural properties. Several features exhibited by these networks have been interpreted to be the result of evolutionary dynamics. For instance the degree distributions may follow from a preferential attachment of new genes to older ones during evolution. Here we argue that even in the absence of any evolutionary dynamics, the presence of atypical features may follow from the fact that the network implements certain functions. To examine this network function shapes network structure scenario, we focus on the Arabidopsis genetic network controlling early flower organogenesis in which gene expression dynamics has been modelled using a Boolean framework. Specifically, for a system with 15 master genes, the phenotype consists of 10 experimentally determined steady-state expression patterns, considered here as the functional constraints on the network. The space of genetic networks satisfying these constraints is sometimes referred to as the neutral or genotype network. We sample this space using Markov Chain Monte Carlo which allows us to exhibit how the functional (phenotypic) constraints shape the gene network structure. We find that this shaping is strongest for the edge (interaction) usage, with effects that are functionally interpretable. In contrast, higher order features such as degree assortativity and network motifs are hardly shaped by the phenotypic constraints.
- a. Laboratoire de Physique Théorique et Modèles Statistiques (LPTMS),
CNRS : UMR8626 – Université Paris XI – Paris Sud - b. UMR de Génétique Végétale du Moulon, UMR 0320/UMR 8120, INRA / CNRS / Université Paris-Sud, 91190 Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
* E-mail: olivier.martin@u-psud.fr; Fax: +33 16933 2340 - c. Laboratoire Reproduction et Developpement des Plantes, UMR 5667, ENS / CNRS / INRA / Univ. Lyon I, 69364 Lyon cedex 07, France
- d. Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences, Inselstr. 22, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
* E-mail: samal@mis.mpg.de; Fax: +49 341 9959 658