Bay Rachael A, Palumbi Stephen R
Department of Biology, Stanford University
Department of Biology, Stanford University.
Genome Biol Evol. 2015 May 15;7(6):1602-12. doi: 10.1093/gbe/evv085.
Population response to environmental variation involves adaptation, acclimation, or both. For long-lived organisms, acclimation likely generates a faster response but is only effective if the rates and limits of acclimation match the dynamics of local environmental variation. In coral reef habitats, heat stress from extreme ocean warming can occur over several weeks, resulting in symbiont expulsion and widespread coral death. However, transcriptome regulation during short-term acclimation is not well understood. We examined acclimation during a 11-day experiment in the coral Acropora nana. We acclimated colonies to three regimes: ambient temperature (29 °C), increased stable temperature (31 °C), and variable temperature (29-33 °C), mimicking local heat stress conditions. Within 7-11 days, individuals acclimated to increased temperatures had higher tolerance to acute heat stress. Despite physiological changes, no gene expression changes occurred during acclimation before acute heat stress. However, we found strikingly different transcriptional responses to heat stress between acclimation treatments across 893 contigs. Across these contigs, corals acclimated to higher temperatures (31 °C or 29-33 °C) exhibited a muted stress response--the magnitude of expression change before and after heat stress was less than in 29 °C acclimated corals. Our results show that corals have a rapid phase of acclimation that substantially increases their heat resilience within 7 days and that alters their transcriptional response to heat stress. This is in addition to a previously observed longer term response, distinguishable by its shift in baseline expression, under nonstressful conditions. Such rapid acclimation may provide some protection for this species of coral against slow onset of warming ocean temperatures.
种群对环境变化的响应涉及适应、驯化或两者兼有。对于长寿生物来说,驯化可能会产生更快的响应,但只有在驯化的速率和限度与当地环境变化的动态相匹配时才有效。在珊瑚礁栖息地,极端海洋变暖带来的热应激可能会持续数周,导致共生体排出和珊瑚大面积死亡。然而,短期驯化过程中的转录组调控尚未得到很好的理解。我们在对小枝鹿角珊瑚进行的为期11天的实验中研究了驯化情况。我们将珊瑚群落驯化至三种温度状态:环境温度(29℃)、升高的稳定温度(31℃)和可变温度(29 - 33℃),以模拟当地的热应激条件。在7 - 11天内,适应温度升高的个体对急性热应激具有更高的耐受性。尽管有生理变化,但在急性热应激之前的驯化过程中没有发生基因表达变化。然而,我们发现,在893个重叠群中,不同驯化处理对热应激的转录反应存在显著差异。在这些重叠群中,适应较高温度(31℃或29 - 33℃)的珊瑚表现出较弱的应激反应——热应激前后的表达变化幅度小于适应29℃的珊瑚。我们的结果表明,珊瑚具有快速驯化阶段,能在7天内大幅提高其耐热性,并改变其对热应激的转录反应。这是除了之前观察到的在非应激条件下以基线表达变化为特征的长期反应之外的情况。这种快速驯化可能为这种珊瑚提供一些保护,使其免受海洋温度缓慢上升的影响。