4.5 Article

Rearing environment affects the genetic architecture and plasticity of DNA methylation in Chinook salmon

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HEREDITY
卷 126, 期 1, 页码 38-49

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41437-020-0346-4

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  1. YIAL
  2. Natural Science and Engineering Council Discovery Grant [814014]

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Genetic architecture and phenotypic plasticity are important factors when studying trait variation and its interaction with environmental factors. DNA methylation shows plasticity and gene-specific effects in different rearing environments, indicating developmental stage-specific influences of environmental factors on DNA methylation. Understanding genetic and environmental influences on methylation is crucial for future studies on acclimation and adaptation mechanisms.
Genetic architecture and phenotypic plasticity are important considerations when studying trait variation within and among populations. Since environmental change can induce shifts in the genetic architecture and plasticity of traits, it is important to consider both genetic and environmental sources of phenotypic variation. While there is overwhelming evidence for environmental effects on phenotype, the underlying mechanisms are less clear. Variation in DNA methylation is a potential mechanism mediating environmental effects on phenotype due to its sensitivity to environmental stimuli, transgenerational inheritance, and influences on transcription. To characterize the effect of environment on methylation, we created two 6 x 6 (North Carolina II) Chinook salmon breeding crosses and reared the offspring in two environments: uniform hatchery tanks and seminatural stream channels. We sampled the fish twice during development, at the alevin (larval) and fry (juvenile) stages. We measured DNA methylation at 13 genes using a PCR-based bisulfite sequencing protocol. The genetic architecture of DNA methylation differed between rearing environments, with greater additive and nonadditive genetic variance in hatchery fish and greater maternal effects in seminatural channel fish, though gene-specific variation was evident. We observed plasticity in methylation across all assayed genes, as well as gene-specific effects at two genes in alevin and six genes in fry, indicating developmental stage-specific effects of rearing environment on methylation. Characterizing genetic and environmental influences on methylation is critical for future studies on DNA methylation as a potential mechanism for acclimation and adaptation.

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