Transgenerational effects of temperature fluctuations in Arabidopsis thaliana

Author:

Deng Ying12,Bossdorf Oliver1,Scheepens J F13

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Evolution and Ecology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen 72076, Germany

2. Natural History Research Center, Shanghai Natural History Museum, Shanghai 200041, China

3. Faculty of Biological Sciences, Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main 60438, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Plant stress responses can extend into the following generations, a phenomenon called transgenerational effects. Heat stress, in particular, is known to affect plant offspring, but we do not know to what extent these effects depend on the temporal patterns of the stress, and whether transgenerational responses are adaptive and genetically variable within species. To address these questions, we carried out a two-generation experiment with nine Arabidopsis thaliana genotypes. We subjected the plants to heat stress regimes that varied in timing and frequency, but not in mean temperature, and we then grew the offspring of these plants under controlled conditions as well as under renewed heat stress. The stress treatments significantly carried over to the offspring generation, with timing having stronger effects on plant phenotypes than stress frequency. However, there was no evidence that transgenerational effects were adaptive. The magnitudes of transgenerational effects differed substantially among genotypes, and for some traits the strength of plant responses was significantly associated with the climatic variability at the sites of origin. In summary, timing of heat stress not only directly affects plants, but it can also cause transgenerational effects on offspring phenotypes. Genetic variation in transgenerational effects, as well as correlations between transgenerational effects and climatic variability, indicates that transgenerational effects can evolve, and have probably already done so in the past.

Funder

China Scholarship Council

Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science

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