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12.9:

Epistasis

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Epistasis

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In addition to multiple alleles different genes at different locations may interact and influence phenotypes like fur pigment in a phenomenon called epistasis.

For example, a rabbit's color is affected by various genes, among them tyrosinase. Interestingly, unpigmented animals, appearing completely white are homozygous for a recessive mutant allele of tyrosinase. Whereas those carrying a dominant allele have colored coats.

Such color is partly established by another gene called tyrosinase-related protein one, abbreviated TYRP1. Here the dominant variant causes black fur while a brown or chocolate hue results from the recessive allele.

Disregarding other factors involved in coat color rabbits heterozygous at these two loci appear black. And when they mate any offspring with two recessive tyrosinase alleles will have white unpigmented fur regardless of their TYRP1 elements, since the recessive tyrosinase alleles mask or hide the brown or black fur color that would otherwise be produced. This is an example of recessive epistasis where the tyrosinase configuration is epistatic to TYRP1.

By evaluating epistatic interactions researchers can understand how different species developed coat colors to suit unique environments, and even determine whether genes act in the same cellular pathway.

12.9:

Epistasis

In addition to multiple alleles at the same locus influencing traits, numerous genes or alleles at different locations may interact and influence phenotypes in a phenomenon called epistasis. For example, rabbit fur can be black or brown depending on whether the animal is homozygous dominant or heterozygous at a TYRP1 locus. However, if the rabbit is also homozygous recessive at a locus on the tyrosinase gene (TYR), it will have an unshaded coat that appears white, regardless of its TYRP1 alleles. This is an example of recessive epistasis and demonstrates that most biological systems involve many genetic elements that interact in multiple and complex ways.

Epistasis

Although Mendel chose seven unrelated traits in peas to study gene segregation, most traits involve multiple gene interactions that create a spectrum of phenotypes. When the interaction of various genes or alleles at different locations influences a phenotype, this is called epistasis. Epistasis often involves one gene masking or interfering with the expression of another (antagonistic epistasis). Epistasis often occurs when different genes are part of the same biochemical pathway. The expression of a gene might depend on a gene product in the same biochemical pathway.

Tyrosinase and TYRP1

One example of epistasis is fur pigmentation in rabbits. Many genes affect a rabbit’s fur color, including one called tyrosinase (TYR). Animals homozygous dominant or heterozygous at a tyrosinase locus will produce colored coats, while homozygous recessive rabbits develop unpigmented coats that appear white. Fur color is also partially established by another gene called tyrosinase-related protein 1, or TYRP1. The dominant allele produces black fur, and the recessive allele produces brown or chocolate fur.

Disregarding other factors involved in coat color, rabbits heterozygous at both loci will have black fur. However, their offspring that inherit two recessive tyrosinase alleles will have white, unpigmented fur, regardless of which TYRP1 alleles they inherit. This is an example of recessive epistasis because the recessive TYR alleles mask or interfere with the production of a black or brown coat. In this case, TYR is epistatic to TYRP1.

The Complexity of Genetic Interactions

The study of epistatic interactions allows researchers to understand how different species developed coat colors to suit unique environments. In general terms, it helps determine the functional relationship between genes, the ordering of genes in a pathway, and how different alleles quantitatively impact phenotypes. As such, since the concept of epistasis was introduced, it has become increasingly clear that most biological systems involve many genetic elements that interact with one another in multiple and complex ways.

Suggested Reading

Polster, Robert, Christos J. Petropoulos, Sebastian Bonhoeffer, and Frédéric Guillaume. “Epistasis and Pleiotropy Affect the Modularity of the Genotype–Phenotype Map of Cross-Resistance in HIV-1.” Molecular Biology and Evolution 33, no. 12 (December 2016): 3213–25. [Source]

Hoekstra, H. E. “Genetics, Development and Evolution of Adaptive Pigmentation in Vertebrates.” Heredity 97, no. 3 (September 2006): 222–34. [Source]

Phillips, Patrick C. “Epistasis—the Essential Role of Gene Interactions in the Structure and Evolution of Genetic Systems.” Nature Reviews. Genetics 9, no. 11 (November 2008): 855–67. [Source]