Intergenerational adaptations to stress are evolutionarily conserved, stress-specific, and have deleterious trade-offs
Authors
Willis, Alexandra
Fisher, Kinsey
Braukmann, Fabian
Publication Date
2021-10-08Journal Title
eLife
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
Volume
10
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Burton, N. O., Willis, A., Fisher, K., Braukmann, F., Price, J., Stevens, L., Baugh, L. R., et al. (2021). Intergenerational adaptations to stress are evolutionarily conserved, stress-specific, and have deleterious trade-offs. eLife, 10 https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.73425
Description
Funder: National Institutes of Health; FundRef: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000002
Abstract
Despite reports of parental exposure to stress promoting physiological adaptations in progeny in diverse organisms, there remains considerable debate over the significance and evolutionary conservation of such multigenerational effects. Here, we investigate four independent models of intergenerational adaptations to stress in Caenorhabditis elegans – bacterial infection, eukaryotic infection, osmotic stress, and nutrient stress – across multiple species. We found that all four intergenerational physiological adaptations are conserved in at least one other species, that they are stress -specific, and that they have deleterious tradeoffs in mismatched environments. By profiling the effects of parental bacterial infection and osmotic stress exposure on progeny gene expression across species, we established a core set of 587 genes that exhibited a greater than twofold intergenerational change in expression in response to stress in C. elegans and at least one other species, as well as a set of 37 highly conserved genes that exhibited a greater than twofold intergenerational change in expression in all four species tested. Furthermore, we provide evidence suggesting that presumed adaptive and deleterious intergenerational effects are molecularly related at the gene expression level. Lastly, we found that none of the effects we detected of these stresses on C. elegans F1 progeny gene expression persisted transgenerationally three generations after stress exposure. We conclude that intergenerational responses to stress play a substantial and evolutionarily conserved role in regulating animal physiology and that the vast majority of the effects of parental stress on progeny gene expression are reversible and not maintained transgenerationally.
Keywords
Research Article, Evolutionary Biology, Genetics and Genomics, transgenerational, P. vranovensis, osmotic stress, nutrient stress, N. parisii infection, intergenerational, C. elegans
Sponsorship
Centre Trophoblast Research (Next Generation fellowship)
National Institutes of Health (GM117408)
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (Grant #522691522691)
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (FG2019-12040)
Cancer Research UK (C13474/A18583)
Cancer Research UK (C6946/A14492)
Wellcome Trust (104640/Z/14/Z)
Wellcome Trust (092096/Z/10/Z)
Identifiers
73425
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.73425
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330387
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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