Genetic assimilation and accommodation shape adaptation to heat stress in a splash pool copepod
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-10 收录
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRP619639
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Understanding how organisms respond to variable environments is becoming increasingly important in our rapidly changing world. Beyond genetic adaptation, plastic responses to the environment can alter phenotypes and fitness, ultimately driving evolution. However, the interaction between plasticity and adaptation during environmental change is complex and hard to measure in natural systems. Here, we used two populations of Tigriopus californicus copepods, a thermally tolerant southern population and a thermally sensitive northern population, to conduct a fully factorial split brood experiment where we exposed animals as larvae and adults to either a sublethal heat stress or control (no heat treatment) before measuring heat tolerance and gene expression patterns. We found that increased thermal tolerance across populations came at the expense of physiological plasticity and evolved through higher baseline expression of heat stress response genes across environmental contexts as well as increased gene expression plasticity in response to heat stress. In the thermally sensitive northern population, developmental exposure to heat stress led to higher adult tolerance and lower physiological plasticity underpinned by higher gene expression plasticity. Importantly, we found that the same set of genes were largely responsible for both the evolved higher tolerance in the southern population and the developmentally induced tolerance in the northern population suggesting that in this system, a shared molecular response contributes to acclimation and adaptation across both populations. These results link existing physiological plasticity with long-term evolutionary responses providing insight into how these populations will adapt and respond to future environmental change.
创建时间:
2025-09-17



