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Negative autoregulation linearizes the dose response and
suppresses the heterogeneity
of gene expression
D. Nevozhay, R. Adams, K. Murphy, K. Josić and G. Balazsi
Although several recent studies have focused on gene autoregulation, the effects of
negative feedback (NF) on gene expression are not fully understood. Our purpose here
was to determine how the strength of NF regulation affects the characteristics of
gene expression in yeast cells harboring chromosomally integrated transcriptional
cascades that consist of the yEGFP reporter controlled by (i) the constitutively
expressed tetracycline repressor TetR or (ii) TetR repressing its own expression.
Reporter gene expression in the cascade without feedback showed a steep (sigmoidal)
dose–response and a wide, nearly bimodal yEGFP distribution, giving rise to a noise
peak at intermediate levels of induction. We developed computational models that
reproduced the steep dose–response and the noise peak and predicted that negative
autoregulation changes reporter expression from bimodal to unimodal and transforms
the dose–response from sigmoidal to linear. Prompted by these predictions,
we constructed a “linearizer” circuit by adding TetR autoregulation to our original
cascade and observed a massive (7-fold) reduction of noise at intermediate induction
and linearization of dose–response before saturation. A simple mathematical argument
explained these findings and indicated that linearization is highly robust to
parameter variations. These findings have important implications for gene expression
control in eukaryotic cells, including the design of synthetic expression systems.
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