Title: Phenotypic Plasticity
1Phenotypic Plasticity
- Genotypes produce different phenotypes in
response to different environmental conditions
2Most intuitive way of visualizing phenotypic
plasticity is through a norm of reaction
G1
Phenotype
G2
G3
Environment
3Historical Overview
- Study of phenotypic plasticity is the modern
incarnation of the ancient philosophical debate
about the roles of nature versus nurture - John Locke (1632-1704) suggested that humans are
born as blank slates on which the environment
writes their character early representation of
the nurturistic position - Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) was a pioneer of the
application of mechanistic principles to explain
human motivation a forerunner of modern genetic
determinism, the naturistic school - Resolution of the debate has been achieved by the
study of phenotypic plasticity
4Historical Overview
- James Mark Baldwins (1896, American Naturalist)
new factor in evolution individuals differ
not only in their phenotypic attributes (as
Darwin knew well) but in the way those attributes
are altered by changing environmental
circumstances (in their reaction norms) - Those organisms more adaptable (i.e., plastic)
to new circumstances are bound to leave more
progeny - Baldwin effect is a clever Darwinian
interpretation of situations that might otherwise
appear Lamarckian - Baldwins arguments however were intuitive
without empirical evidence
5Scientific Study of Genotype X Environment
Interactions
- Began with the introduction of the concept of the
reaction norm (called phenotypic curves) by
Richard Woltereck (1909) - Initial experiment (1909) under low to high food
availability
6A
A
B
Head Size
C
Low Intermediate High
Algae
7Woltereck 1912
- Studied the phenomenon in Daphnia, known today as
cyclomorphosis - When exposed to the presence of a predator they
respond by altering the shape of their body to
produce a helmet or neck teeth effective in
reducing predation pressure
8Historical Overview
- Experimental support came predominantly from Ivan
Schmalhausen (1949) and Conrad Waddington (1952) - Schmalhausen argued that evolution proceeds by
altering the developmental systems of organisms
changing the norm of reaction to cope with and
anticipate environmental stimuli e.g., case of
Arrowhead, Sagittaria sagittifolia
Heterophylly
9Historical Overview
- Schmalhausens notion of change from the old norm
to the new one (stabilizing selection) through
an evironmentally induced response, mirrors
Waddingtons notion of genetic assimilation - Genetic assimilation is defined as a phenotypic
character that is initially produced in response
to some environmental influence, then stabilized
due to natural selection, and finally occurs in
the absence of the previously necessary external
influence
10Genetic Assimilationin Drosophila
Selected
60
Crossveinless
30
Unselected
0 22
Generations
Waddington 1952
Heat shock during larval development 40 vs. 25C
11Historical Perspective
- Reaction norms and phenotypic plasticity did not
play a prominent role during the neo-Darwinian
synthesis of the 1930s and 1940s - It was not until Anthony D. Bradshaw published an
influential review in 1965 that research on
phenotypic plasticity was brought into the main
stage of evolutionary theory
12Historical Perspective
- Bradshaw was the first to clearly state two
fundamental concepts of plasticity - First, plasticity is a character in its own
right, genetically controlled, and it can
therefore evolve somewhat independently of other
aspects of the phenotype - Second, plasticity is not a property of an entire
genotype it needs to be studied in reference to
specific environments and traits a given
genotype can be plastic for one trait in response
to one set of environmental conditions but not to
another set, or it can be plastic for some traits
but not others in response to the same set of
conditions
13Modern Concepts in Plasticity Research
- One of the most controversial and difficult areas
of study in plasticity concerns the possibility
that plasticity may be an adaptive character
directly targeted by natural selection
14Some Examples
- Plant compensatory responses (i.e.,
over-compensation) - Nemoria arizonaria twig and catkin caterpillar
morphs - Spadefoot Toads Tiger Salamanders larvae
carnivorous omnivorous morphs - Aphids - winged and non-winged morphs
- Daphnia helmet neck tooth forms
15Testing the Adaptive Plasticity Hypothesis
- Dudley, S.A. and J. Schmitt. 1996. Testing the
adaptive plasticity hypothesis density-dependent
selection on manipulated stem length in Impatiens
capensis. American Naturalist 147445-465
16Shade Avoidance in Plants
- Type of plasticity in which individual plants can
perceive the presence of other plants
(competitors) by means of detecting changes in
the spectral quality of light - Created elongated and shortened (suppressed)
plants by altering the red to far red ratio of
light and placed them each at high and low plant
densities -
17Cumulative Fitness
Elongated
Suppressed
High Low
Density
RFR elongated 1.11 - Nigrosin RFR suppressed
6.9 Copper Sulfate RFR natural 1.24 full sun
18A Second Concept in Plasticity Research
- There are costs associated with plasticity
- DeWitt et al. 1998 proposes the following costs
- Maintenance energetic costs of sensory and
regulatory mechanisms - Production excess cost of producing structures
plastically (when compared to the same structures
produced through fixed genetic responses) - Developmental Instability plasticity may imply
reduced canalization of development within each
environment, or developmental imprecision - Genetic deleterious effects of plasticity genes
through linkage, pleiotropy, epistasis with other
genes
19Problem Is That They Are All Difficult To Test
Empirically No One To Date Has Successfully Done
So
- Students of phenotypic evolution will surely find
this area of research particularly challenging
and potentially rewarding
20A Third Area of Plasticity Research Molecular
Basis of Adaptive Plastic Responses
- Plasticity Genes
- Regulatory loci that directly respond to a
specific environmental stimulus by triggering a
specific series of morphogenic changes
21How do we find plasticity genes?
- Candidate genes - based on previous knowledge of
the function of genes - QTL mapping
- Microarrays
- RNA Seq
22Wu, R. 1998. The detection of plasticity genes in
heterogeneous environments. Evolution 52967-977.
- Used QTLs to assess molecular genetic mechanisms
associated with phenotypically plastic
differences in height, basal area, stem allometry
and volume indices in Populus - QTLs active in only one environment likely
constitute regulatory plasticity whereas QTLs
active across environments may be good candidates
for allelic sensitivity - Showed that most of the genes were of a
regulatory nature
23Phytochromes Plasticity Genes?
- Shade avoidance made possible by phytochromes
- Five have been described A,B,C,D,E
- Shade avoidance primarily due to phytochrome B
but A and possibly C play a role in complex
morphological response
24Pigliucci, M. and J. Schmitt. 1999. Genes
affecting phenotypic plasticity in Arabidopsis
pleiotropic effects and reproductive fitness of
photomorphic mutants. Journal of Evolutionary
Biology 12551-562
Blue Receptor Mutant Wild Type Phy B Mutant Phy
A-E Mutant
No. of Fruits
Low RFR
High Light
25Two Conclusions
- First, the shade avoidance response is
characterized by molecular redundancy, given that
only the elimination of all five phytochromes
completely flattens the reaction norm yielding a
non-plastic genotype - Second, under high light, the blue receptor
actually acts in opposition to the phytochromes
in respect to the wild type, so that eliminating
its functionality actually prolongs the
vegetative phase in that environment