| Literature DB >> 29492283 |
Rose E O'Dea1, Daniel W A Noble1, Sheri L Johnson2, Daniel Hesselson3,4, Shinichi Nakagawa1,2,3.
Abstract
Rapid environmental change is predicted to compromise population survival, and the resulting strong selective pressure can erode genetic variation, making evolutionary rescue unlikely. Non-genetic inheritance may provide a solution to this problem and help explain the current lack of fit between purely genetic evolutionary models and empirical data. We hypothesize that epigenetic modifications can facilitate evolutionary rescue through 'epigenetic buffering'. By facilitating the inheritance of novel phenotypic variants that are generated by environmental change-a strategy we call 'heritable bet hedging'-epigenetic modifications could maintain and increase the evolutionary potential of a population. This process may facilitate genetic adaptation by preserving existing genetic variation, releasing cryptic genetic variation and/or facilitating mutations in functional loci. Although we show that examples of non-genetic inheritance are often maladaptive in the short term, accounting for phenotypic variance and non-adaptive plasticity may reveal important evolutionary implications over longer time scales. We also discuss the possibility that maladaptive epigenetic responses may be due to 'epigenetic traps', whereby evolutionarily novel factors (e.g. endocrine disruptors) hack into the existing epigenetic machinery. We stress that more ecologically relevant work on transgenerational epigenetic inheritance is required. Researchers conducting studies on transgenerational environmental effects should report measures of phenotypic variance, so that the possibility of both bet hedging and heritable bet hedging can be assessed. Future empirical and theoretical work is required to assess the relative importance of genetic and epigenetic variation, and their interaction, for evolutionary rescue.Entities:
Keywords: climate change; epimutation; evolutionary tracking; evolutionary traps; plasticity; transgenerational epigenetic inheritance
Year: 2016 PMID: 29492283 PMCID: PMC5804513 DOI: 10.1093/eep/dvv014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Epigenet ISSN: 2058-5888
Glossary of terms
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Adaptive epigenetic response | An adaptive phenotypic response to selection brought about by environmental change that is mediated through epigenetic inheritance, resulting in the population reaching a fitness optimum in the new environment |
| Cryptic genetic variation |
Genetic variability that is not translated into phenotypic variability under normal environmental conditions, but that is exposed under atypical environmental conditions generating heritable phenotypic variation [
|
| Epigenetic buffering | Epigenetic modifications which provide phenotypic resilience against fluctuating environmental change, facilitating the persistence of a population through rapid environmental change over ecological timescales |
| Epigenetic inheritance |
Inheritance of phenotypic variations that do not stem from differences in the DNA sequences [
|
| Epigenetic trap | Any change in the environment which causes the existing epigenetic machinery of an organism to produce a maladapted phenotype, with no increase in phenotypic variance within the population |
| Evolutionary potential |
Ability of a population to respond to future selection pressures, taking into account currently existing (visible and cryptic) genetic variation [
|
| Evolutionary rescue |
Genetic adaptation that allows population recovery from environmentally induced demographic effects that would normally cause extinction [
|
| Genetic assimilation |
Process by which selection converts an environmentally responsive phenotype into a phenotype that no longer requires the environmental stimuli for its production [
|
| Heritable bet hedging |
Process in which phenotypic variation is increased due to environmental factors and importantly, induced phenotypic values are heritable. In contrast, traditional bet hedging is a process in which evolved phenotypic variability buffer unpredictable environmental changes but heritability of phenotypic values are usually not assumed (
|
| Intergenerational (epigenetic) inheritance (i.e. parental effects) |
Effect of a parental phenotype on their offspring’s phenotype that cannot be attributed to the parental or offspring genome, non-parental components of the environment or their interaction [
|
| Non-genetic inheritance |
The transmission to offspring of parental phenotypic or environment variation that does not include the inheritance of DNA sequences (i.e. genes) [
|
| Phenotypic plasticity |
Changed phenotypic expression of a genotype/individual under different environmental conditions. Two forms of plasticity have recently been defined by Snell-Rood [
|
| Standing genetic variation |
Genetic variation that is present in the population as opposed to new mutations [
|
| Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance |
Transmission from parents to offspring of phenotypic traits resulting from different methylation patterns or chromatin structure that affects gene expression, generally over two or more generations (F
0
–F
N
, where
|
| Transposable elements |
Mobile DNA segments in the genome. Two major types exist: (i) DNA transposon that do not use reverse transcriptase to integrate into the genome and (ii) retrotransposon that uses reverse transcriptase to integrate into the genome [
|
Figure 1.Three different ways in which epigenetic modification can increase heritable phenotypic variation and thus evolutionary potential. Red arrows indicate transient nature of these effects
Examples of environmental factors that can have transgenerational (≧F 2 ; F 3 if F 1 offspring were in utero during exposure of F 0 mother) effects, the nature of those effects on offspring and their consequences for offspring fitness [ 15 ]
|
Environmental manipulation experienced by parental generation (F
0
)
| Effect on offspring | Consequences for offspring fitness | Offspring generations affected | Species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Chemicals: endocrine disrupters | |||||
| Fungicide (vinclozolin) | Behaviour: mate selection | Negative | F 3 |
|
[
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| Fungicide (vinclozolin) | Disease: testicular, prostate, kidney, ovarian | Negative | F 3 |
|
[
|
| Fungicide (vinclozolin) and pesticide (methoxychor) | Male infertility | Negative | F 1 –F 4 |
|
[
|
| Hydrocarbons (jet fuel) | Disease: ovarian | Negative | F 1 –F 3 |
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[
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| Plastic (bisphenol A) | Social interaction and social behaviours | Positive or negative | F 1 –F 4 |
|
[
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| Plastic (DEHP (di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate)) | Reproductive: sperm counts, motility and testis organization | Negative | F 1 –F 4 |
|
[
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| Dioxin (TCDD (2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin)) | Sex ratio, skeletal abnormalities, fertility | Negative | F 1 –F 2 |
|
[
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| Pesticides, plastics, dioxin, jet fuel | Reproductive: ovarian and spermatogenic | Negative | F 3 |
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[
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| 17α-ethinylestradiol | Fertilization rate, embryo survival | Negative | F 2 –F 3 |
|
[
|
| Tributyltin | Metabolic: obesity | Negative | F 2 –F 3 |
|
[
|
| Other abiotic | |||||
| Heavy metal exposure | Increased tolerance | Positive | F 2 |
|
[
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| Exposure to odour (fear conditioning) | Sensitivity to odour | Positive | F 2 |
|
[
|
|
| |||||
| Nutrition | |||||
| Undernourishment | Body weight and obesity | Negative | F 2 |
|
[
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| Dietary composition (food restricted) | Sex ratio and growth | Negative | F 2 |
|
[
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| Dietary composition (over nutrition) | Longevity, disease | Negative | F 2 |
|
[
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| Dietary composition (habitat quality) | Foraging strategy, population growth rate | Positive | F 2 –F 3 |
|
[
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| Other biotic | |||||
| Predation | Maturation and clutch size | Positive | F 1 –F 3 |
|
[
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| Maternal separation/maternal stress | Depressive-like behaviour, behavioural response to aversive environment | Negative | F 2 –F 3 |
|
[
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| Traumatic stress (unpredictable maternal separation) | Avoidance and fear, depressive behaviours, abnormal metabolism | Negative and positive | F 1 –F 2 |
|
[
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a See also tables in these references: Table 1 in [ 83 ]; Tables 1 and 2 in [ 37 , 83 ]; Tables 1 and 3 in [ 9 ]; Table 3 in [ 59 ].
Figure 2.Epigenetic mechanisms can lead to heritable bet hedging that buffers populations from extinction. ( A ) A population experiences stochastic environmental variation across generations (black solid line) that falls within the zone experienced by the population over its evolutionary history (dotted black line). This is contrasted with directional stochastic variation (solid red line) caused by a rapid environmental shift across the generations that drives the population mean environment beyond normal environmental variation. For example, considering temperature, while we might assume that temperature fluctuations remain constant over time (i.e. they vary randomly within ±3°) the mean temperature might move from 23°C to 25°C over 10 years (what we consider directional stochastic variation). Populations can be maintained through bet hedging strategies within the dotted black lines, but require the presence of heritable phenotypic variation to cope with novel directional environmental changes (red dotted lines). ( B ) A bet hedging strategy fails to allow populations to cope with directional stochastic environmental change (red solid line). Bet hedging results in plastic allocation strategies (e.g. maternal effects) in the parental generation that leads to increased phenotypic variation in the subsequent generation. Selection favours individuals most closely matching the environmental optimum at the time of selection (black square) while selecting against individuals too far from the phenotypic optimum (red square with red X). The next generation, however, will on average exhibit similar phenotypes to generation 5, because these plastic responses are not heritable. ( C ) A bet hedging strategy where phenotypic variation is heritable (heritable bet hedging) allows a population to adaptively track an environmental optimum outside the range experienced in its evolutionary history. This is achieved by recruiting epigenetic mechanisms to ‘convert’ non-heritable phenotypic variability, generated through a bet hedging strategy, to heritable phenotypic variability (i.e. adaptive epigenetic tracking). In both (B) and (C) similar coloured circles (blue or orange) represent the phenotypes of two family lineages while different patterned circles represent each unique generation. Two columns of circles within a given generation represent the phenotypes before selection and the phenotypes left after selection (i.e. circles within the black square). Only 3–4 generations are shown for simplicity
Figure 3.( A ) Epigenetic buffering helps retain genetic variance in response to a rapid decline in population fitness (dotted line). In response to an environmental stressor, we predict that total phenotypic variance should increase. In F 1 , intergenerational non-genetic/epigenetic effects (i.e. bet hedging) initially generate most phenotypic variance (orange bar), which shelters genetic variance (black bar) because this process dissociates the genotype from phenotype. In F 2 , phenotypic variation continues to increase, but a larger proportion of variance is attributed to transgenerational epigenetic inheritance, facilitating the heritability of a portion of the phenotypic variants. Over longer time scales, if the population remains in a stressful environment, it might begin to re-acquire genetic variants (replenishing genetic variance) through biased mutation rates (or through increased rates of mutation). Over longer time periods, we may get genetic assimilation as the population converges on the new fitness optima. ( B ) Depletion of genetic variation in a population when transgenerational epigenetic mechanisms (red bar) comprise a very low, non-significant proportion of the total phenotypic variance. In response to an environmental stressor, we see strong selection on phenotypic variation that slowly depletes genetic variation