Stanton-Geddes John, Nguyen Andrew, Chick Lacy, Vincent James, Vangala Mahesh, Dunn Robert R, Ellison Aaron M, Sanders Nathan J, Gotelli Nicholas J, Cahan Sara Helms
Department of Biology, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, 05405, USA.
Data Scientist, Dealer.com, 1 Howard St, Burlington, VT, 05401, USA.
BMC Genomics. 2016 Mar 2;17:171. doi: 10.1186/s12864-016-2466-z.
The distributions of species and their responses to climate change are in part determined by their thermal tolerances. However, little is known about how thermal tolerance evolves. To test whether evolutionary extension of thermal limits is accomplished through enhanced cellular stress response (enhanced response), constitutively elevated expression of protective genes (genetic assimilation) or a shift from damage resistance to passive mechanisms of thermal stability (tolerance), we conducted an analysis of the reactionome: the reaction norm for all genes in an organism's transcriptome measured across an experimental gradient. We characterized thermal reactionomes of two common ant species in the eastern U.S, the northern cool-climate Aphaenogaster picea and the southern warm-climate Aphaenogaster carolinensis, across 12 temperatures that spanned their entire thermal breadth.
We found that at least 2 % of all genes changed expression with temperature. The majority of upregulation was specific to exposure to low temperatures. The cool-adapted A. picea induced expression of more genes in response to extreme temperatures than did A. carolinensis, consistent with the enhanced response hypothesis. In contrast, under high temperatures the warm-adapted A. carolinensis downregulated many of the genes upregulated in A. picea, and required more extreme temperatures to induce down-regulation in gene expression, consistent with the tolerance hypothesis. We found no evidence for a trade-off between constitutive and inducible gene expression as predicted by the genetic assimilation hypothesis.
These results suggest that increases in upper thermal limits may require an evolutionary shift in response mechanism away from damage repair toward tolerance and prevention.
物种的分布及其对气候变化的响应部分取决于它们的热耐受性。然而,对于热耐受性如何进化却知之甚少。为了测试热限的进化扩展是通过增强细胞应激反应(增强反应)、保护性基因的组成性高表达(遗传同化)还是从抗损伤转变为热稳定性的被动机制(耐受性)来实现的,我们对反应组进行了分析:反应组是指在实验梯度下测量的生物体转录组中所有基因的反应规范。我们在美国东部的两种常见蚂蚁物种,即北方凉爽气候的云杉平胸蚁和南方温暖气候的卡罗来纳平胸蚁,在跨越其整个热宽度的12个温度下,对它们的热反应组进行了表征。
我们发现所有基因中至少2%的基因表达随温度变化。大多数上调是低温暴露特有的。适应凉爽环境的云杉平胸蚁比卡罗来纳平胸蚁对极端温度诱导表达的基因更多,这与增强反应假说一致。相反,在高温下,适应温暖环境的卡罗来纳平胸蚁下调了云杉平胸蚁中许多上调的基因,并且需要更极端的温度来诱导基因表达下调,这与耐受性假说一致。我们没有发现如遗传同化假说所预测的组成型和诱导型基因表达之间存在权衡的证据。
这些结果表明,提高热上限可能需要反应机制从损伤修复向耐受性和预防的进化转变。