4.5 Article

FUNCTIONAL GENOMICS OF ADAPTATION TO HYPOXIC COLD-STRESS IN HIGH-ALTITUDE DEER MICE: TRANSCRIPTOMIC PLASTICITY AND THERMOGENIC PERFORMANCE

期刊

EVOLUTION
卷 68, 期 1, 页码 48-62

出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/evo.12257

关键词

Ecological genomics; high-altitude adaptation; hypoxia; phenotypic flexibility; RNA-seq; thermogenesis

资金

  1. JFS from the National Institutes of Health/National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [R01 HL087216, HL087216-S1]
  2. National Science Foundation [DEB-0614342, IOS-0949931]
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  4. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

向作者/读者索取更多资源

In species that are distributed across steep environmental gradients, adaptive variation in physiological performance may be attributable to transcriptional plasticity in underlying regulatory networks. Here we report the results of common-garden experiments that were designed to elucidate the role of regulatory plasticity in evolutionary adaptation to hypoxic cold-stress in deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus). We integrated genomic transcriptional profiles with measures of metabolic enzyme activities and whole-animal thermogenic performance under hypoxia in highland (4350 m) and lowland (430 m) mice from three experimental groups: (1) wild-caught mice that were sampled at their native elevations; (2) wild-caught/lab-reared mice that were deacclimated to low-elevation conditions in a common-garden lab environment; and (3) the F-1 progeny of deacclimated mice that were maintained under the same low-elevation common-garden conditions. In each experimental group, highland mice exhibited greater thermogenic capacities than lowland mice, and this enhanced performance was associated with upregulation of transcriptional modules that influence several hierarchical steps in the O-2 cascade, including tissue O-2 diffusion (angiogenesis) and tissue O-2 utilization (metabolic fuel use and cellular oxidative capacity). Most of these performance-related transcriptomic changes occurred over physiological and developmental timescales, suggesting that regulatory plasticity makes important contributions to fitness-related physiological performance in highland deer mice.

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