Abstract
Genetic variation for plastic phenotypes potentially contributes phenotypic variation to populations that can be selected during adaptation to novel ecological contexts. However, the basis and extent of plastic variation that manifests in diverse environments remains elusive. Here, we characterize copper reaction norms for mRNA abundance among five Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains to 1) describe population variation across the full range of ecologically relevant copper concentrations, from starvation to toxicity, and 2) to test the hypothesis that plastic networks exhibit increased population variation for gene expression.We find that although the vast majority of the variation is small in magnitude (considerably <2-fold), not just some, but most genes demonstrate variable expression across environments, across genetic backgrounds, or both. Plastically expressed genes included both genes regulated directly by copper-binding transcription factors Mac1 and Ace1 and genes indirectly responding to the downstream metabolic consequences of the copper gradient, particularly genes involved in copper, iron, and sulfur homeostasis. Copper-regulated gene networks exhibitedmore similar behaviorwithin the population in environments where those networks have a large impact on fitness. Nevertheless, expression variation ingenes likeCup1, important to surviving copper stress,waslinked with variation inmitotic fitnessand in the breadth of differential expression across the genome. By revealing a broader and deeper range of population variation, our results provide further evidence for the interconnectedness of genome-wide mRNA levels, their dependence on environmental context and genetic background, and the abundance of variation in gene expression that can contribute to future evolution. © The Author(s) 2012.
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Hodgins-Davis, A., Adomas, A. B., Warringer, J., & Townsend, J. P. (2012). Abundant gene-by-environment interactions in gene expression reaction norms to copper within saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genome Biology and Evolution, 4(11), 1061–1079. https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evs084
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