3 research outputs found

    Epigenetic Mechanisms as Drivers of Environmental Responses in Stony Corals

    Get PDF
    The current pace of anthropogenic global change is imposing unprecedented conditions to biological systems. Coral reef ecosystems are particularly sensitive to the rapid increase in thermal anomalies and the changes in water chemistry caused by global change. However, although their decline has been documented worldwide, there are signs suggesting that stony corals harbor greater phenotypic plasticity than previously expected, sparking the interest in the study acquired non-genetic modifications (e.g., epigenome, microbiome) potentially increasing their resilience to global change, and constituting one of the main targets for intervention. Epigenetics constitutes an exciting frontier to understand how the environment influences the regulation of the expression of genetic information and modulates phenotypic variation. This has the potential to change the way we understand short-term acclimation and adaptation to a changing environment, aiding to improve predictive models of ecosystemic persistence under current and future climatic scenarios. However, while there is evidence supporting the idea of epigenetic mechanisms participating in rapid-response acclimatization, specific details about how this process is influenced by specific environmental conditions are lacking. In non-model organisms, we often lack information about the presence and functionality of some of these mechanisms, limiting the application of epigenetics in the study of ecosystem resilience in response to global change. This dissertation aims to elucidate how epigenetic mechanisms contribute to coral phenotypic responses to the effects of global change in the oceans. For that purpose, hypotheses about the presence and responsiveness of different epigenetic mechanisms in corals, its interaction with the genome and microbial communities, as well as its role modulating gene expression and phenotypic responses to diverse stressors were explored. Histone repertoires and/or full methylomes were characterized for the first time in the corals Acropora cervicornis and Montastraea cavernosa. The participation of these epigenetic mechanisms modulating responses to nutrient contamination, seasonal environmental change, thermal stress and acidification was demonstrated, providing evidence supporting its participation in intragenerational plasticity. A conserved seasonal methylation program was observed in A. cervicornis. This together with the strong influence of the genome over DNA methylation evidence its heritability and its potential to participate in intergenerational plasticit
    corecore