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Genetic compensation is a remarkable biological concept to explain the genetic robustness in an organism to maintain its fitness and viability if there is a disruption occurred in the genetic variation by mutation. However, the underlying mechanism in genetic compensation remain unsolvable. The initial concept of genetic compensation has been studied in model organisms when there was a discrepancy between knockout-mediated and knockdown-mediated phenotypes. In the zebrafish model, several studies have reported that zebrafish mutants did not exhibit severe phenotype as shown in zebrafish morphants for the same genes. This phenomenon in zebrafish mutants but not morphants is due to the response of genetic compensation. In 2019, two amazing works partially uncovered genetic compensation could be triggered by the upregulation of compensating genes through regulating NMD and/or PTC-bearing mRNA in collaboration with epigenetic machinery in mutant zebrafish. In this review, we would like to update the recent advances and future perspectives of genetic compensation studies, which including the hypothesis of time-dependent involvement and addressing the discrepancy between knockout-mediated and knockdown-mediated to study gene function in the zebrafish model. At last, the study of genetic compensation could be a potential therapeutic strategy to treat human genetic disorder related diseases.

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Publication history

Received: 27 June 2021
Revised: 08 November 2021
Accepted: 01 December 2021
Published: 05 January 2022
Issue date: March 2023

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© 2022 The Authors.

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This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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