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arXiv:2604.26082v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: The evolutionary origins of structural features in reconstructed gene-regulatory networks (GRNs) remain poorly understood, especially given the random aspects of gene expression. Here, we extend a classical model of GRN evolution to allow a single network to express a distribution of phenotypes through noisy developmental dynamics. Inspired by Hopfield networks, we introduce an alignment score that quantifies the cohesion of gene-gene interactions in the network to support a target stable phenotype. Overall, evolved populations optimized their fitness and reduced the length of their developmental paths. Increased noise levels promoted alignment, enriched coherent feedforward and positive feedback loops relative to non-evolved and noiseless controls, and buffered against mutational perturbations. Alignment provides intuitive interpretations because an increased number of appropriately signed gene-gene interactions is more redundant and thus more robust against developmental noise and mutations. Together, these results demonstrate that cell-to-cell variability exerts strong selective pressure, driving the evolution of aligned, robust, and motif-enriched GRN architectures.

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