Abstract
AbstractThe environment experienced by one generation has the potential to affect the subsequent one through non-genetic inheritance of parental effects. Since both mothers and fathers can influence their offspring, questions arise regarding how the maternal, paternal and offspring experiences integrate into the resulting phenotype. We aimed to disentangle the maternal and paternal contributions to transgenerational thermal acclimation in a reef fish,Acanthochromis polyacanthus, by exposing two generations to elevated temperature (+1.5°C) in a full factorial design and analyzing the F2 hepatic gene expression. Paternal and maternal effects showed common but also parent-specific components, with the father having the largest influence in shaping the offspring transcriptomic profile. Fathers contributed to transgenerational response to warming through transfer of epigenetically controlled stress-response mechanisms while mothers influenced increased lipid metabolism regulation. However, the key to acclimation potential was matching thermal experiences of the parents. When both parents were exposed to the same condition, offspring showed increased structural RNA production and transcriptional regulation, whereas environmental mismatch in parents resulted in maladaptive parental condition-transfer, revealed by translation suppression and endoplasmic reticulum stress. Interestingly, the offspring’s own environmental experience had the smallest influence on their hepatic transcription profiles. Taken together, our results show the complex nature of the interplay between paternal, maternal and offspring cue integration, and reveal that acclimation potential to ocean warming depends not only on maternal and paternal contributions, but importantly on congruent parental thermal experiences.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory