Abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Essential genes are those required for an organism's survival and reproduction. However, gene essentiality is not absolute; it can be highly context-dependent, varying across genetic and environmental conditions. Most previous studies have assessed gene essentiality in a single genetic background, limiting our understanding of its variability. The objective of this study was to investigate how genetic background influences gene essentiality in the multicellular model organism Caenorhabditis elegans. METHODS: We examined gene essentiality in three genetically distinct C. elegans strains: N2, LKC34, and MY16. A total of 294 genes were selected for RNA interference (RNAi) knockdown: 101 previously classified as essential, 175 as nonessential and 18 as conditional (condition-dependent essentiality). Each gene-strain combination was tested in multiple biological and technical replicates, and rigorous quality control and statistical analyses were used to identify strain-specific effects. RESULTS: Our results demonstrate substantial variation in gene essentiality across genetic backgrounds. Among the 101 genes previously identified as essential in the N2 strain, only 56% were consistently essential in all three strains. We identified 23 genes that were newly essential across all strains, 13 genes essential in two strains, and 9 genes essential in only one strain. These results reveal that a significant proportion of essential genes exhibit strain-dependent essentiality. CONCLUSIONS: This study underscores the importance of genetic context in determining gene essentiality. Our findings suggest that relying on a single genetic background, such as N2, may lead to an incomplete or misleading view of gene essentiality. Understanding context-dependent gene essentiality has important implications for functional genomics, evolutionary biology, and potentially for translational research where genetic background can modulate phenotypic outcomes.