Coates Sarah E R, Comeault Aaron A, Wood Daniel P, Fay Michael F, Creer Simon, Osborne Owen G, Dunning Luke T, Papadopulos Alexander S T
Molecular Ecology and Evolution Group, School of Environmental and Natural Sciences, Bangor University, Bangor LL57 2UW, United Kingdom.
Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Richmond TW9 3AE, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Feb 4;122(5):e2409541122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2409541122. Epub 2025 Jan 30.
Phenotypic plasticity may pave the way for rapid adaptation to newly encountered environments. Although it is often contested, there is growing evidence that initial plastic responses of ancestral populations to new environmental cues may promote subsequent adaptation. However, we do not know whether plasticity to cues present in the ancestral habitat (past-cue plasticity) can facilitate adaptation to novel cues. Conceivably, this could occur if plastic responses are coincidentally optimal to both past and novel cues (i.e., are preadaptive) or if they are transferred to novel cues during adaptation. Past plastic phenotype values could also become fixed during adaptation to the new environment. To uncover the role of past-cue plasticity in adaptation, we tested gene expression plasticity responses of two parallel mine-waste-adapted populations and their closest coastal relatives. Plants were exposed to the past and novel cues of salt and zinc, which revealed that during adaptation to mine waste, plasticity to salt diminishes. Despite this, our results show that ancestral plasticity to salt has a substantial impact on subsequent adaptation to zinc. For a third of genes that have evolved zinc plasticity in mine populations, salt plasticity has been transferred to the zinc response. Furthermore, a quarter of fixed expression differences between mine and coastal populations were similar to ancestral salt responses. Alongside evidence that ancestral plasticity to novel cues can facilitate adaptation, our results provide a clear indication that ancestral past-cue plasticity can also play a key role in rapid, parallel adaptation to novel habitats.
表型可塑性可能为快速适应新遇到的环境铺平道路。尽管这一观点常常受到争议,但越来越多的证据表明,祖先种群对新环境线索的初始可塑性反应可能会促进随后的适应性。然而,我们尚不清楚对祖先栖息地中存在的线索的可塑性(过去线索可塑性)是否能够促进对新线索的适应。可以想象,如果可塑性反应对过去和新线索碰巧都是最优的(即具有预适应性),或者如果它们在适应过程中转移到新线索上,那么这种情况就可能发生。在适应新环境的过程中,过去的可塑性表型值也可能会固定下来。为了揭示过去线索可塑性在适应中的作用,我们测试了两个平行适应矿山废弃物的种群及其最亲近的沿海近缘种的基因表达可塑性反应。将植物暴露于盐和锌的过去和新线索中,结果表明,在适应矿山废弃物的过程中,对盐的可塑性降低。尽管如此,我们的结果表明,祖先对盐的可塑性对随后对锌的适应有重大影响。在矿山种群中已经进化出锌可塑性的基因中,有三分之一的盐可塑性已经转移到锌反应中。此外,矿山种群和沿海种群之间四分之一的固定表达差异与祖先对盐的反应相似。除了有证据表明对新线索的祖先可塑性能够促进适应外,我们的结果还清楚地表明,祖先的过去线索可塑性在对新栖息地的快速、平行适应中也能发挥关键作用。