Kordonowy Lauren, MacManes Matthew
Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Biomedical Sciences, University of New Hampshire, Rudman Hall (MCBS), 46 College Road, Durham, 03824, NH, USA.
BMC Genomics. 2017 Jun 23;18(1):473. doi: 10.1186/s12864-017-3840-1.
The understanding of genomic and physiological mechanisms related to how organisms living in extreme environments survive and reproduce is an outstanding question facing evolutionary and organismal biologists. One interesting example of adaptation is related to the survival of mammals in deserts, where extreme water limitation is common. Research on desert rodent adaptations has focused predominantly on adaptations related to surviving dehydration, while potential reproductive physiology adaptations for acute and chronic dehydration have been relatively neglected. This study aims to explore the reproductive consequences of acute dehydration by utilizing RNAseq data in the desert-specialized cactus mouse (Peromyscus eremicus).
We exposed 22 male cactus mice to either acute dehydration or control (fully hydrated) treatment conditions, quasimapped testes-derived reads to a cactus mouse testes transcriptome, and then evaluated patterns of differential transcript and gene expression. Following statistical evaluation with multiple analytical pipelines, nine genes were consistently differentially expressed between the hydrated and dehydrated mice. We hypothesized that male cactus mice would exhibit minimal reproductive responses to dehydration; therefore, this low number of differentially expressed genes between treatments aligns with current perceptions of this species' extreme desert specialization. However, these differentially expressed genes include Insulin-like 3 (Insl3), a regulator of male fertility and testes descent, as well as the solute carriers Slc45a3 and Slc38a5, which are membrane transport proteins that may facilitate osmoregulation.
These results suggest that in male cactus mice, acute dehydration may be linked to reproductive modulation via Insl3, but not through gene expression differences in the subset of other a priori tested reproductive hormones. Although water availability is a reproductive cue in desert-rodents exposed to chronic drought, potential reproductive modification via Insl3 in response to acute water-limitation is a result which is unexpected in an animal capable of surviving and successfully reproducing year-round without available external water sources. Indeed, this work highlights the critical need for integrative research that examines every facet of organismal adaptation, particularly in light of global climate change, which is predicted, amongst other things, to increase climate variability, thereby exposing desert animals more frequently to the acute drought conditions explored here.
了解与生活在极端环境中的生物如何生存和繁殖相关的基因组和生理机制,是进化生物学家和生物学家面临的一个突出问题。适应性的一个有趣例子与沙漠中哺乳动物的生存有关,在沙漠中,极端的水分限制很常见。对沙漠啮齿动物适应性的研究主要集中在与脱水生存相关的适应性上,而急性和慢性脱水的潜在生殖生理适应性则相对被忽视。本研究旨在利用沙漠特有的仙人掌鼠(Peromyscus eremicus)的RNAseq数据,探索急性脱水对生殖的影响。
我们将22只雄性仙人掌鼠暴露于急性脱水或对照(完全补水)处理条件下,将睾丸来源的reads准映射到仙人掌鼠睾丸转录组,然后评估差异转录本和基因表达模式。经过多个分析管道的统计评估,在补水和脱水小鼠之间有9个基因持续差异表达。我们假设雄性仙人掌鼠对脱水的生殖反应最小;因此,处理之间差异表达基因数量较少与当前对该物种极端沙漠特化的认识一致。然而,这些差异表达基因包括胰岛素样3(Insl3),一种雄性生育力和睾丸下降的调节因子,以及溶质载体Slc45a3和Slc38a5,它们是可能促进渗透调节的膜转运蛋白。
这些结果表明,在雄性仙人掌鼠中,急性脱水可能通过Insl3与生殖调节有关,但不是通过其他先验测试的生殖激素子集中的基因表达差异。虽然水的可获得性是暴露于长期干旱的沙漠啮齿动物的生殖线索,但通过Insl3对急性水分限制的潜在生殖调节在一种能够在没有外部水源的情况下全年生存并成功繁殖的动物中是一个意外结果。事实上这项工作凸显了综合研究的迫切需求,该研究要考察生物适应性的各个方面,特别是鉴于全球气候变化,预计除其他外,这将增加气候变异性,从而使沙漠动物更频繁地暴露于此处探索的急性干旱条件下。