4.7 Article

Gene expression underlying parenting and being parented shows limited plasticity in response to different ambient temperatures

期刊

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
卷 31, 期 20, 页码 5326-5338

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16649

关键词

climate change; insects; parental care; parent-offspring; transcriptomics

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Flexible interactions between parents and offspring are essential for buffering families against variable environmental conditions. In a study on carrion beetles, researchers found that high temperatures did not induce behavioral plasticity in parents, but rather, behavioral stability was associated with the maintenance of existing genetic programs. The study suggests that while selection for compensatory gene expression could expand parents' tolerance for different temperatures, without expanding the toolkit of genes involved, adaptive changes are unlikely to occur.
Flexible interactions between parents and offspring are essential for buffering families against variable, unpredictable, and challenging environmental conditions. In the subsocial carrion beetle, Nicrophorus orbicollis, mid-summer temperatures impose steep fitness costs on parents and offspring but do not elicit behavioural plasticity in parents. Here, we ask if plasticity of gene expression underpins this behavioural stability or facilitates independent compensation by larvae. To test this, we characterized gene expression of parents and offspring before and during active parenting under benign (20 degrees C) and stressful (24 degrees C) temperatures to identify genes of parents and offspring associated with thermal response, parenting/being parented, and gene expression plasticity associated with behavioural stability of parental care. The main effects of thermal and social condition each shaped patterns of gene expression in females, males, and larvae. In addition, we implicated 79 genes in females as buffering parental behaviour across environments. The majority of these underwent significant changes in expression in actively parenting mothers at the benign temperature, but not at the stressful temperature. Our results suggest that neither genetic programmes for parenting nor their effects on offspring gene expression are fundamentally different under stressful conditions, and that behavioural stability is associated primarily with the maintenance of existing genetic programmes rather than replacement or supplementation. Thus, while selection for compensatory gene expression could expand the range of thermal conditions parents will tolerate, without expanding the toolkit of genes involved selection is unlikely to lead to adaptive changes of function.

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