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      Transgenerational effects persist down the maternal line in marine sticklebacks: gene expression matches physiology in a warming ocean.

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          Abstract

          Transgenerational effects can buffer populations against environmental change, yet little is known about underlying mechanisms, their persistence or the influence of environmental cue timing. We investigated mitochondrial respiratory capacity (MRC) and gene expression of marine sticklebacks that experienced acute or developmental acclimation to simulated ocean warming (21°C) across three generations. Previous work showed that acute acclimation of grandmothers to 21°C led to lower (optimized) offspring MRCs. Here, developmental acclimation of mothers to 21°C led to higher, but more efficient offspring MRCs. Offspring with a 21°C × 17°C grandmother-mother environment mismatch showed metabolic compensation: their MRCs were as low as offspring with a 17°C thermal history across generations. Transcriptional analyses showed primarily maternal but also grandmaternal environment effects: genes involved in metabolism and mitochondrial protein biosynthesis were differentially expressed when mothers developed at 21°C, whereas 21°C grandmothers influenced genes involved in hemostasis and apoptosis. Genes involved in mitochondrial respiration all showed higher expression when mothers developed at 21° and lower expression in the 21°C × 17°C group, matching the phenotypic pattern for MRCs. Our study links transcriptomics to physiology under climate change, and demonstrates that mechanisms underlying transgenerational effects persist across multiple generations with specific outcomes depending on acclimation type and environmental mismatch between generations.

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          Most cited references36

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          Ecology. Physiology and climate change.

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            Climate change affects marine fishes through the oxygen limitation of thermal tolerance.

            A cause-and-effect understanding of climate influences on ecosystems requires evaluation of thermal limits of member species and of their ability to cope with changing temperatures. Laboratory data available for marine fish and invertebrates from various climatic regions led to the hypothesis that, as a unifying principle, a mismatch between the demand for oxygen and the capacity of oxygen supply to tissues is the first mechanism to restrict whole-animal tolerance to thermal extremes. We show in the eelpout, Zoarces viviparus, a bioindicator fish species for environmental monitoring from North and Baltic Seas (Helcom), that thermally limited oxygen delivery closely matches environmental temperatures beyond which growth performance and abundance decrease. Decrements in aerobic performance in warming seas will thus be the first process to cause extinction or relocation to cooler waters.
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              The adaptive significance of maternal effects

              T Mousseau (1998)
              Recently, the adaptive significance of maternal effects has been increasingly recognized. No longer are maternal effects relegated as simple `troublesome sources of environmental resemblance' that confound our ability to estimate accurately the genetic basis of traits of interest. Rather, it has become evident that many maternal effects have been shaped by the action of natural selection to act as a mechanism for adaptive phenotypic response to environmental heterogeneity. Consequently, maternal experience is translated into variation in offspring fitness.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Evol Appl
                Evolutionary applications
                Wiley
                1752-4571
                1752-4571
                October 2016
                : 9
                : 9
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Coastal Ecology Section Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar-und Meeresforschung Wadden Sea Station Sylt Germany.
                [2 ] Integrative Ecophysiology Section Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar-und Meeresforschung Bremerhaven Germany.
                [3 ] Integrative Ecophysiology Section Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar-und Meeresforschung Bremerhaven Germany; Man Society Environment (MGU) Department of Environmental Sciences University of Basel Switzerland.
                [4 ] Ecological Chemistry Section Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar-und Meeresforschung Bremerhaven Germany.
                Article
                EVA12370
                10.1111/eva.12370
                5039323
                27695518
                2a284c7f-ee11-487e-bf20-02be1ce0adfc
                History

                Gasterosteus aculeatus,acute versus developmental acclimation,climate change,epigenetics,maternal effects,mitochondrial respiration,transcriptome,transgenerational plasticity

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