Adaptation in Unstable Environments and Global Gene Losses: Small but Stable Gene Networks by the May–Wigner Theory

Author:

Xu Shaohua12ORCID,Shao Shao1,Feng Xiao1,Li Sen1,Zhang Lingjie1ORCID,Wu Weihong1,Liu Min1,Tracy Miles E1,Zhong Cairong3,Guo Zixiao1,Wu Chung-I1,Shi Suhua1ORCID,He Ziwen1

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Biocontrol and Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Resources, School of Life Sciences, Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai), Sun Yat-sen University , Guangzhou , China

2. School of Ecology, Sun Yat-sen University , Shenzhen , China

3. Institute of Wetland Research, Hainan Academy of Forestry (Hainan Academy of Mangrove) , Haikou , China

Abstract

Abstract Although gene loss is common in evolution, it remains unclear whether it is an adaptive process. In a survey of seven major mangrove clades that are woody plants in the intertidal zones of daily environmental perturbations, we noticed that they generally evolved reduced gene numbers. We then focused on the largest clade of Rhizophoreae and observed the continual gene set reduction in each of the eight species. A great majority of gene losses are concentrated on environmental interaction processes, presumably to cope with the constant fluctuations in the tidal environments. Genes of the general processes for woody plants are largely retained. In particular, fewer gene losses are found in physiological traits such as viviparous seeds, high salinity, and high tannin content. Given the broad and continual genome reductions, we propose the May–Wigner theory (MWT) of system stability as a possible mechanism. In MWT, the most effective solution for buffering continual perturbations is to reduce the size of the system (or to weaken the total genic interactions). Mangroves are unique as immovable inhabitants of the compound environments in the land–sea interface, where environmental gradients (such as salinity) fluctuate constantly, often drastically. Extending MWT to gene regulatory network (GRN), computer simulations and transcriptome analyses support the stabilizing effects of smaller gene sets in mangroves vis-à-vis inland plants. In summary, we show the adaptive significance of gene losses in mangrove plants, including the specific role of promoting phenotype innovation and a general role in stabilizing GRN in unstable environments as predicted by MWT.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation

Innovation Group Project of Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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