Evolutionary adaptations generally reverse phenotypic plasticity to restore ancestral phenotypes during new environment adaptation in cattle

Author:

Jiang Qiang12ORCID,Zhu Li3,Zeng Hao3,Basang Zhuzha4,Suolang Quji4,Huang Jinming2,Cai Yafei1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Genetics, Breeding and Reproduction, College of Animal Science and Technology Nanjing Agricultural University Nanjing China

2. Institute of Animal Science and Veterinary Medicine Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences Jinan China

3. Department of Animal Genetics, Breeding and Reproduction, College of Animal Science and Technology Yunnan Agricultural University Kunming China

4. Institute of Animal Science and Veterinary Medicine Tibet Academy of Agricultural and Animal Husbandry Sciences Lhasa China

Abstract

AbstractPhenotype plasticity and evolution adaptations are the two main ways in which allow populations to deal with environmental changes, but the potential relationship between them remains controversial. Using a reciprocal transplant approach with cattle adapted to the Tibetan Plateau and adjacent lowlands, we aim to investigate the relative contributions of evolutionary processes and phenotypic plasticity in driving both phenotypic and transcriptomic changes under natural conditions. We observed that while numerous genetic transcriptomic changes were evident during the forward adaptation to highland environments, plastic changes predominantly facilitate the transformation of transcriptomes into a preferred state when Tibetan cattle are reintroduced to lowland habitats. Genes with ancestral plasticity are generally reversed by evolutionary adaptations and show a closer expression level to the ancestral stage in evolved Tibetan cattle. A similar trend was also observed at the phenotypes level, with a majority of biochemical and hemorheology phenotypes showing a tendency to revert to their ancestral patterns, suggesting the restoration of ancestral expression levels is a widespread evolutionary trend during adaptation. The findings of our study contribute to the debate regarding the relative contributions of plasticity and genetic changes in mammal environment adaptation. Furthermore, we highlight that the restoration of ancestral phenotypes represents a general pattern in cattle new environment adaptation.

Publisher

Wiley

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