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Environment-induced heritable variations are common in Arabidopsis thaliana

Xiaohe Lin, Junjie Yin, Y. -Z. Wang, Jing Yao, Qingshun Quinn Li, Vít Latzel, Oliver Bossdorf, Yuanye Zhang

2024Nature Communications24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Parental or ancestral environments can induce heritable phenotypic changes, but whether such environment-induced heritable changes are a common phenomenon remains unexplored. Here, we subject 14 genotypes of Arabidopsis thaliana to 10 different environmental treatments and observe phenotypic and genome-wide gene expression changes over four successive generations. We find that all treatments caused heritable phenotypic and gene expression changes, with a substantial proportion stably transmitted over all observed generations. Intriguingly, the susceptibility of a genotype to environmental inductions could be predicted based on the transposon abundance in the genome. Our study thus challenges the classic view that the environment only participates in the selection of heritable variation and suggests that the environment can play a significant role in generating of heritable variations.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGeneticsPhenotypeArabidopsis thalianaTransposable elementGenomeGeneGenotypeArabidopsisGenetic variationEvolutionary biologyMutantPlant Molecular Biology ResearchChromosomal and Genetic VariationsGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies