|
|
||||||||
|
Plant Physiology 138:558-559 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists Dude, Where's My Phenotype? Dealing with Redundancy in Signaling NetworksDepartment of Botany, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada M5S 3B2
In the post-genomic era, our understanding of signal transduction networks necessarily entails the use of genetics analysis. Nowhere is this revealed more clearly than the use of publicly available knockout collections, which are plundered daily by plant researchers in search of mutants to test their latest signaling fantasies (Rhee et al., 2003
This problem does not mean traditional genetic analysis is waning. It simply means we need to squeeze more out of the classic equation Phenotype = Genotype + Environment. On one side of the equation, Phenotype is being refined through improvements in molecular analysis. In this context, this means that phenotype is in the eye of the beholder and that global transcript profiling of a mutant with "no observable phenotype" can yield enough information to place a gene into a signaling pathway or reveal the compensatory changes in related pathways that enable buffering. Again, we turn to S. cerevisiae for hard numbershere greater than 95% of 300 gene deletions strains examined by whole-genome transcript profiling displayed effects on the transcription of at least one other gene besides the deleted gene (Hughes et al., 2000
On the other side of the equation, Genotype, which for most researchers encompasses single gene variation, needs to be prodded with a bit more gusto. In S. cerevisiae, for example, systematic genetic analysis has been attempted in which a mutation of interest is crossed to a large collection of deletion mutants to produce a synthetic genetic array (SGA) in which the phenotypic consequences of double mutants can be accessed (Tong et al., 2001
Manipulation of the third term, Environment, is seldom thought of by signaling researchers, although under duress we admit complex, natural, "real-world" environments may uncover previously hidden phenotypes. Another way to systematically prod the Environment term is through the application of chemical genetics. This technology normally involves phenotype-based screens of an organism against libraries of defined small molecules to identify compounds that perturb specific gene products (Stockwell, 2000
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.900152. * Corresponding author; e-mail mccourt{at}botany.utoronto.ca; fax 4169785878.
Blackwell HE, Zhao Y (2003) Chemical genetic approaches to plant biology. Plant Physiol 133: 448455 Gu Z, Steinmetz LM, Gu X, Scharfe C, Davis RW, Li WH (2003) Role of duplicate genes in genetic robustness against null mutations. Nature 421: 6366[CrossRef][Medline] Hughes TR, Marton MJ, Jones AR, Roberts CJ, Stoughton R, Armour CD, Bennett HA, Coffey E, Dai H, He YD, et al (2000) Functional discovery via a compendium of expression profiles. Cell 102: 109126[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Rhee SY, Beavis W, Berardini TZ, Chen G, Dixon D, Doyle A, Garcia-Hernandez M, Huala E, Lander G, Montoya M, et al (2003) The Arabidopsis Information Resource (TAIR): a model organism database providing a centralized, curated gateway to Arabidopsis biology, research materials and community. Nucleic Acids Res 31: 224228 Stockwell BR (2000) Chemical genetics: ligand-based discovery of gene function. Nat Rev Genet 2: 116125
To JP, Haberer G, Ferreira FJ, Deruere J, Mason MG, Schaller GE, Alonso JM, Ecker JR, Kieber JJ (2004) Type-A Arabidopsis response regulators are partially redundant negative regulators of cytokinin signaling. Plant Cell 16: 658671
Tong AH, Evangelista M, Parsons AB, Xu H, Bader GD, Page N, Robinson M, Raghibizadeh S, Hogue CW, Bussey H, et al (2001) Systematic genetic analysis with ordered arrays of yeast deletion mutants. Science 294: 23642368 Zhu H, Snyder M (2002) "Omic" approaches for unraveling signaling networks. Curr Opin Cell Biol 14: 173179[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY | THE PLANT CELL | |
|---|---|---|---|