Plasticity of Gene Expression and Thermal Tolerance: Implications for Climate Change Vulnerability in a Tropical Forest Lizard.

Ecological and evolutionary physiology Pub Date : 2024-03-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-15 DOI:10.1086/729927
Adam A Rosso, Brianna Casement, Albert K Chung, John David Curlis, Edita Folfas, Maria A Gallegos, Lauren K Neel, Daniel J Nicholson, Claire E Williams, W Owen McMillan, Michael L Logan, Christian L Cox
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Abstract

AbstractTropical ectotherms are thought to be especially vulnerable to climate change because they have evolved in temporally stable thermal environments and therefore have decreased tolerance for thermal variability. Thus, they are expected to have narrow thermal tolerance ranges, live close to their upper thermal tolerance limits, and have decreased thermal acclimation capacity. Although models often predict that tropical forest ectotherms are especially vulnerable to rapid environmental shifts, these models rarely include the potential for plasticity of relevant traits. We measured phenotypic plasticity of thermal tolerance and thermal preference as well as multitissue transcriptome plasticity in response to warmer temperatures in a species that previous work has suggested is highly vulnerable to climate warming, the Panamanian slender anole lizard (Anolis apletophallus). We found that many genes, including heat shock proteins, were differentially expressed across tissues in response to short-term warming. Under long-term warming, the voluntary thermal maxima of lizards also increased, although thermal preference exhibited only limited plasticity. Using these data, we modeled changes in the activity time of slender anoles through the end of the century under climate change and found that plasticity should delay declines in activity time by at least two decades. Our results suggest that slender anoles, and possibly other tropical ectotherms, can alter the expression of genes and phenotypes when responding to shifting environmental temperatures and that plasticity should be considered when predicting the future of organisms under a changing climate.

基因表达和耐热性的可塑性:热带森林蜥蜴对气候变化脆弱性的影响。
摘要 热带外温动物被认为特别容易受到气候变化的影响,因为它们是在时间上稳定的热环境中进化的,因此对热变异的耐受力较低。因此,预计它们的热耐受范围较窄,生活在热耐受上限附近,热适应能力较弱。尽管模型经常预测热带森林外温动物特别容易受到快速环境变化的影响,但这些模型很少包括相关性状的可塑性潜力。我们测量了巴拿马纤细踝蜥(Anolis apletophallus)的热耐受性和热偏好的表型可塑性,以及多组织转录组对温度升高的可塑性。我们发现,包括热休克蛋白在内的许多基因在不同组织中对短期变暖有不同的表达。在长期变暖的情况下,蜥蜴的自愿最大热量也有所增加,但热偏好只表现出有限的可塑性。利用这些数据,我们模拟了气候变化下细长鼹鼠到本世纪末的活动时间变化,结果发现可塑性应将活动时间的下降推迟至少二十年。我们的研究结果表明,纤细鼹鼠以及其他热带外温动物在应对环境温度变化时可以改变基因和表型的表达,在预测气候变化下生物的未来时应考虑可塑性。
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