RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Selection against expression noise explains the origin of the hourglass pattern of Evo-Devo JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 700997 DO 10.1101/700997 A1 Jialin Liu A1 Michael Frochaux A1 Vincent Gardeux A1 Bart Deplancke A1 Marc Robinson-Rechavi YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/07/31/700997.abstract AB The evolution of embryological development has long been characterized by deep conservation. Both morphological and transcriptomic surveys have proposed a “hourglass” model of Evo-Devo1,2. A stage in mid-embryonic development, the phylotypic stage, is highly conserved among species within the same phylum3–7. However, the reason for this phylotypic stage is still elusive. Here we hypothesize that the phylotypic stage might be characterized by selection for robustness to noise and environmental perturbations. This could lead to mutational robustness, thus evolutionary conservation of expression and the hourglass pattern. To test this, we quantified expression variability of single embryo transcriptomes throughout fly Drosophila melanogaster embryogenesis. We found that indeed expression variability is lower at extended germband, the phylotypic stage. We explain this pattern by stronger histone modification mediated transcriptional noise control at this stage. In addition, we find evidence that histone modifications can also contribute to mutational robustness in regulatory elements. Thus, the robustness to noise does indeed contributes to robustness of gene expression to genetic variations, and to the conserved phylotypic stage.