Author:
Tsang Stacey S.K.,Nong Wenyan,Xie Yichun,Qu Zhe,Yip Ho Yin,Gaitan-Espitia Juan Diego,Tai Amos P. K.,Yeung Ying Yeung,Tobe Stephen S.,Bendena William G.,Hui Jerome H.L.
Abstract
AbstractInsects are the most abundant described living creatures in the world, and they play important roles in our global ecosystem. Climate change affects global biodiversity, and researchers in many fields are striving to better understand the impact of the climate crisis. One such endeavour is the study of temperature-dependent effects on insects. At present, we know little of how climate affects gene expression in insects of different sexes. Here, we took four species of fruit flies of the genusDrosophila(D. melanogaster, D. virilis, D. pseudoobscura,andD. erecta), and subjected the male and female flies of each species to three different temperatures to test their sex-specific gene expression responses. A total of 144 transcriptomic profiles of protein-coding genes and microRNAs were generated. We found that, at the same temperature, there were more male-biased than female-biased protein-coding genes and microRNAs in all four investigated drosophilid species. Interestingly, upon temperature changes, there were more differentially expressed protein-coding genes in females than in males in all four investigated species, while the microRNAs were highly species- and sex-specific. This study provides the first evidence that sex-biased protein-coding gene and microRNA expression responses to temperature change differ between insect species within the same genus, and demonstrates the complexity of sex-specific responses of insects to climate change.HighlightsAt the same temperature, protein coding gene and microRNA expression showed a greater bias towards males than towards females in all four tested insect species.In response to increasing temperature, females of all 4 tested species exhibited more differentially expressed genes than did males, and enrichment analyses showed that they are species-specific.Differentially expressed microRNAs did not show a conserved trend between insects upon temperature changes.Sex-specific gene and microRNA expression of insects in response to climate change evidently involves a complex adaptation mechanism.Graphical Abstract
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory