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Adaptation to Change Donal T. Manahan Professor of Biological Sciences University of Southern California Adaptation to Change Genotype plus Environment = Phenotype Genetics = Change over longer time Physiology = Change over short time Climate Change in the News a Lot Warming of oceans: life history and trophic mismatch Comprehensive study of ~400 taxa, from 1958 to 2002. (>115,000 samples) Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science, The Laboratory, Citadel Hill, Plymouth, UK Impact of climate change on marine pelagic phenology and trophic mismatch. Edwards, M. and A.J. Richardson, 2004. Nature, 430: 881. Climate impact on plankton ecosystems in the Northeast Atlantic. Richardson, A.J. and D.S. Schoeman, 2004. Science, 305: 1609. Amount Trophic Match “Plant” “Animal” Time Trophic Mismatch Amount “Larvae” Time “Phytoplankton” Complex Life Histories Physiology – The Science of “How Organisms Work” The Larval Biology “Black Box” Food limitation, predation, transport, dispersal etc. Eggs Larval Mortality Recruitment <<1% Themes for Today’s Presentation Genetic Crosses Phenotype (Variation in Survival and Growth) Genomics Physiology Complex Traits: Life Span Feeding, Metabolism Measure & Predict? Different growth rates in similar environment of food and temperature (N = 35 different larval families) 3&5 Larval families crossed 2&5 2&3 5&6 2&6 2&5 3&5 1&5 Up to a 4-times faster growth rate 1&3 3&5 2&5 2&3 0 5 10 Growth rate (µm day-1) 15 20 Data from Pace et al., 2006 J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. Large-scale Culturing Experiments (200-liter vessels x 20 units = 4,000 liters) ~2 million individuals of same larval family per culture vessel Physiological bases of growth differences under same environmental conditions Growth = [Energy In] minus [Energy Out] Condition index - mass - volume feeding Particulate (algae) Dissolved nutrients (transport rate) Data from Pace et al., 2006 J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. metabolism & excretion Energy consumption - metabolic rate - growth efficiency - aerobic capacity (citrate synthase) - ion regulation (ATPase) Loss of ingested food - absorption efficiency Difference in slow and fast growing larvae No difference 20 10 Growth rate (µm day-1) Clearance rate (µl larva-1 hr-1) Fast growing larvae possess higher size-specific feeding rates 6 5x2 5x5 2x2 4 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 2x2 2 150 180 220 Shell length (µm) 260 320 5x5 5x2 Physiological scaling of ~2-fold higher feeding rates set genetically 60 -1 Clearance rate (µl larva hr ) 40 60 40 40 -1 -1 -1 Clearance rate (µl larva hr ) 60 20 10 6 4 2 20 20 10 10 6 6 4 4 Fast-growing larval families) Slow-growing larval families) 2 2 150 180 220 260 320 Shell length (µm) Average feeding rate at 220 µm (N = 332) 150 180 220 260 Shell length (µm) 320 150 180 220 260 320 Shell length (µm) Fast-growers = 21.7 µl larva-1 h-1 Slow-growers = 11.4 µl larva-1 h-1 ~ 2-times faster Similar size-specific metabolic rates Not ‘simple’ reduction in rate Fast-growing larvae Slow-growing larvae 33 250 35 100 53 16 25 12 8 10 4 5 0 3x3 80 100 150 225 Shell length (µm) 320 5x3 3x5 Shell growth (µm day-1) Respiration rate -1 -1 (pmol O2 larva hr ) 600 Similar size-specific metabolic rates Not ‘simple’ reduction in rate Fast-growing larvae Slow-growing larvae 55 250 100 22 16 25 25 12 8 10 4 5 0 2x2 80 100 150 225 Shell length (µm) 320 5x5 2x5 Shell growth (µm day -1) Respiration rate -1 -1 (pmol O2 larva hr ) 600 Physiological regulation of differential growth rates 1. Feeding: ~ 50% of growth rate variation 2. Metabolic regulation: Not total metabolic rate, but differential energy allocation efficiency (mechanism?) The high cost of growth (protein) 250 Protein synthesis ng protein day-1 200 Protein degradation Fed larva percent metabolism 150 100 Protein synthesis Protein growth 50 75% 38 ng protein day-1 0 4 6 8 10 12 Age (days) 14 16 18 From Pace and Manahan, 2006 J. Exp. Biol. (sea urchin larvae) How to grow faster in the same environment? 40 -1 -1 Clearance rate (µl larva hr ) 60 Feeding rate 20 50% 10 6 4 2 150 180 220 260 320 Shell length (µm) Metabolism: Protein depositional efficiency 50% Biological Variation [e.g., growth; size; feeding; physiological rates; etc.] • Vast majority of adaptive traits show complex inheritance – i.e., likely many genes contributing to a complex trait • Hard to unravel the connections between genes, complex traits, and adaptation. Genomic Analysis of Differential Growth Reciprocal cross between parental lines Line 3 Line 5 ♀ ♀ Line 3 3x3 3x5 ♂ Line 5 5x3 5x5 10 Growth Rate (µm day -1) ♂ Larval families with differential growth 9 8 7 6 5 3x3 3x5 5x3 5x5 ANOVA, P<0.05 Transcriptome analysis cDNAs cloned on beads (MegaCloneTM) Slow-growing Fast-growing Sequences read & counted (MPSS: Massively Parallel Signature SequencingTM) Shared genes ‘Slow-growth genes’ ‘Fast-growth genes’ Advantages of MPSS: High sensitivity ( 3 tpm.) No a priori sequence needed Gene ID by ‘signature sequence’ Brenner et al, 2000 Nature Biotech. 18:630 Matches to genes annotated in Gene Ontology Functional Category Its more than environment, and its more than simple Protein Synthesis additive genetics Chromosome Organization 60% 62% Electron Transport ATP Synthesis Endocytosis Protein Folding Regulation of Metabolism Response to Oxidative Stress http://www.GeneOntology.org/ “Building the Organism” Developmental Biology (Egg to Larva) Requires 1000s of genes Growth Physiology (Variation in Size) Number of genes = ? 10? 100? 1,000? 10,000? Highly complex metabolism What to measure? How to predict? Food from the ocean – Hybrid animal protein production Worldwide production of C.gigas = 4.4 M metric tons ($3.7 billion) FAO Yearbook of Fishery Statistics, 2003 Physiological Genomics Define mechanisms of growth and survival based on known Phenotypic Contrasts Phenotype (Variation in Survival and Growth) Genomics Physiology Recruitment: Population Connectivity and Dynamics, Species Management … Chemical Environment Physical Environment Nutritional; chemo-sensory Currents; hydrography RECRUITMENT BIOLOGY Ecology, Evolution Physiology, Biochemistry Cellular, Molecular