The transcriptional landscape of adaptive thermal plasticity within and
across generations: a counterbalance in gene expression induced by
parental acclimation
Abstract
There is increasing evidence for the co-occurrence of adaptive
within-generation (WGP) and transgenerational (TGP) plasticity and the
ecological scenarios driving both types of plasticity. However, some
aspects of their transcriptional mechanisms, such as the role of
alternative splicing and the gene regulation involved in the
compensatory effect of parental acclimation on the offspring’s fitness
in relation to life stages, have remained elusive. We explore these
fundamental questions by considering the desert endemic Drosophila
mojavensis for which prior evidence indicates adaptive thermal
acclimation within and across generations. We implement a full factorial
design to estimate genome-wide patterns of differential gene expression
(DE) and alternative splicing (AS) in response to acclimation treatments
performed in the parental and offspring generations, as well as
considering larva and adult stages. Our results demonstrate that
mechanisms of alternative splicing represent a substantial difference
between WGP and TGP. These mechanisms contribute substantially to
transcriptional plasticity within generations but not across
generations. We found a great number of genes associated with
transcriptional TGP, which is exclusive to larva stages and not adult
samples. Finally, we provide evidence demonstrating that parental
acclimation in TGP triggers a great number of the same genes normally
down-regulated in WGP. Thus, parental acclimation appears to compensate
for the down-regulation of genes during thermal stress in the offspring
generation. This result might be one of the mechanisms explaining the
compensatory effect of parental acclimation in the offspring generation.