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Phenotypic Response to Light Versus Shade Associated with DNA Methylation Changes in Snapdragon Plants (Antirrhinum majus)

The phenotypic plasticity of plants in response to change in their light environment, and in particularly, to shade is a schoolbook example of ecologically relevant phenotypic plasticity with evolutionary adaptive implications. Epigenetic variation is known to potentially underlie plant phenotypic p...

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Autores principales: Mouginot, Pierick, Luviano Aparicio, Nelia, Gourcilleau, Delphine, Latutrie, Mathieu, Marin, Sara, Hemptinne, Jean-Louis, Grunau, Christoph, Pujol, Benoit
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7914928/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33557416
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes12020227
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author Mouginot, Pierick
Luviano Aparicio, Nelia
Gourcilleau, Delphine
Latutrie, Mathieu
Marin, Sara
Hemptinne, Jean-Louis
Grunau, Christoph
Pujol, Benoit
author_facet Mouginot, Pierick
Luviano Aparicio, Nelia
Gourcilleau, Delphine
Latutrie, Mathieu
Marin, Sara
Hemptinne, Jean-Louis
Grunau, Christoph
Pujol, Benoit
author_sort Mouginot, Pierick
collection PubMed
description The phenotypic plasticity of plants in response to change in their light environment, and in particularly, to shade is a schoolbook example of ecologically relevant phenotypic plasticity with evolutionary adaptive implications. Epigenetic variation is known to potentially underlie plant phenotypic plasticity. Yet, little is known about its role in ecologically and evolutionary relevant mechanisms shaping the diversity of plant populations in nature. Here we used a reference-free reduced representation bisulfite sequencing method for non-model organisms (epiGBS) to investigate changes in DNA methylation patterns across the genome in snapdragon plants (Antirrhinum majus L.). We exposed plants to sunlight versus artificially induced shade in four highly inbred lines to exclude genetic confounding effects. Our results showed that phenotypic plasticity in response to light versus shade shaped vegetative traits. They also showed that DNA methylation patterns were modified under light versus shade, with a trend towards global effects over the genome but with large effects found on a restricted portion. We also detected the existence of a correlation between phenotypic and epigenetic variation that neither supported nor rejected its potential role in plasticity. While our findings imply epigenetic changes in response to light versus shade environments in snapdragon plants, whether these changes are directly involved in the phenotypic plastic response of plants remains to be investigated. Our approach contributed to this new finding but illustrates the limits in terms of sample size and statistical power of population epigenetic approaches in non-model organisms. Pushing this boundary will be necessary before the relationship between environmentally induced epigenetic changes and phenotypic plasticity is clarified for ecologically relevant mechanisms with evolutionary implications.
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spelling pubmed-79149282021-03-01 Phenotypic Response to Light Versus Shade Associated with DNA Methylation Changes in Snapdragon Plants (Antirrhinum majus) Mouginot, Pierick Luviano Aparicio, Nelia Gourcilleau, Delphine Latutrie, Mathieu Marin, Sara Hemptinne, Jean-Louis Grunau, Christoph Pujol, Benoit Genes (Basel) Article The phenotypic plasticity of plants in response to change in their light environment, and in particularly, to shade is a schoolbook example of ecologically relevant phenotypic plasticity with evolutionary adaptive implications. Epigenetic variation is known to potentially underlie plant phenotypic plasticity. Yet, little is known about its role in ecologically and evolutionary relevant mechanisms shaping the diversity of plant populations in nature. Here we used a reference-free reduced representation bisulfite sequencing method for non-model organisms (epiGBS) to investigate changes in DNA methylation patterns across the genome in snapdragon plants (Antirrhinum majus L.). We exposed plants to sunlight versus artificially induced shade in four highly inbred lines to exclude genetic confounding effects. Our results showed that phenotypic plasticity in response to light versus shade shaped vegetative traits. They also showed that DNA methylation patterns were modified under light versus shade, with a trend towards global effects over the genome but with large effects found on a restricted portion. We also detected the existence of a correlation between phenotypic and epigenetic variation that neither supported nor rejected its potential role in plasticity. While our findings imply epigenetic changes in response to light versus shade environments in snapdragon plants, whether these changes are directly involved in the phenotypic plastic response of plants remains to be investigated. Our approach contributed to this new finding but illustrates the limits in terms of sample size and statistical power of population epigenetic approaches in non-model organisms. Pushing this boundary will be necessary before the relationship between environmentally induced epigenetic changes and phenotypic plasticity is clarified for ecologically relevant mechanisms with evolutionary implications. MDPI 2021-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7914928/ /pubmed/33557416 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes12020227 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mouginot, Pierick
Luviano Aparicio, Nelia
Gourcilleau, Delphine
Latutrie, Mathieu
Marin, Sara
Hemptinne, Jean-Louis
Grunau, Christoph
Pujol, Benoit
Phenotypic Response to Light Versus Shade Associated with DNA Methylation Changes in Snapdragon Plants (Antirrhinum majus)
title Phenotypic Response to Light Versus Shade Associated with DNA Methylation Changes in Snapdragon Plants (Antirrhinum majus)
title_full Phenotypic Response to Light Versus Shade Associated with DNA Methylation Changes in Snapdragon Plants (Antirrhinum majus)
title_fullStr Phenotypic Response to Light Versus Shade Associated with DNA Methylation Changes in Snapdragon Plants (Antirrhinum majus)
title_full_unstemmed Phenotypic Response to Light Versus Shade Associated with DNA Methylation Changes in Snapdragon Plants (Antirrhinum majus)
title_short Phenotypic Response to Light Versus Shade Associated with DNA Methylation Changes in Snapdragon Plants (Antirrhinum majus)
title_sort phenotypic response to light versus shade associated with dna methylation changes in snapdragon plants (antirrhinum majus)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7914928/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33557416
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes12020227
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