TY - JOUR
T1 - Intergenerational Effects of Early-Life Starvation on Life History, Consumption, and Transcriptome of a Holometabolous Insect
AU - Paul, Sarah Catherine
AU - Singh, Pragya
AU - Dennis, Alice B.
AU - Müller, Caroline
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) as part of SFB TRR 212 (NC³), project 396777467 (granted to C.M.). We also thank University of Potsdam AG Genetics and AG Evolutionary Adaptive Genomics for use of computational resources, Tobias Busche and Katrin Lehmann for assistance with RNA extraction, and Busra Elkatmis, Johanna Winter, and Kath-arina Wessels for help with insect rearing.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/6
Y1 - 2022/6
N2 - Intergenerational effects, also known as parental effects in which the offspring phenotype is influenced by the parental phenotype, can occur in response to factors that occur not only in early but also in late parental life. However, little is known about how these parental life stage–specific environments interact with each other and with the offspring environment to influence offspring phenotypes, particularly in organisms that realize distinct niches across ontogeny. We examined the effects of parental larval starvation and adult reproductive environment on offspring traits under matching or mismatching offspring larval starvation conditions using the holometabolous, haplodiploid insect Athalia rosae (turnip sawfly). We show that parental larval starvation had trait-dependent intergenerational effects on both life history and consumption traits of offspring larvae, partly in interaction with offspring conditions, while there was no significant effect of parental adult reproductive environment. In addition, while offspring larval starvation led to numerous gene-and pathway-level expression differences, parental larval starvation impacted far fewer genes and only the ribosomal pathway. Our findings reveal that parental starvation evokes complex intergenerational effects on offspring life history traits, consumption patterns, and gene expression, although the effects are less pronounced than those of offspring starvation.
AB - Intergenerational effects, also known as parental effects in which the offspring phenotype is influenced by the parental phenotype, can occur in response to factors that occur not only in early but also in late parental life. However, little is known about how these parental life stage–specific environments interact with each other and with the offspring environment to influence offspring phenotypes, particularly in organisms that realize distinct niches across ontogeny. We examined the effects of parental larval starvation and adult reproductive environment on offspring traits under matching or mismatching offspring larval starvation conditions using the holometabolous, haplodiploid insect Athalia rosae (turnip sawfly). We show that parental larval starvation had trait-dependent intergenerational effects on both life history and consumption traits of offspring larvae, partly in interaction with offspring conditions, while there was no significant effect of parental adult reproductive environment. In addition, while offspring larval starvation led to numerous gene-and pathway-level expression differences, parental larval starvation impacted far fewer genes and only the ribosomal pathway. Our findings reveal that parental starvation evokes complex intergenerational effects on offspring life history traits, consumption patterns, and gene expression, although the effects are less pronounced than those of offspring starvation.
KW - compensatory growth
KW - intergenerational effects
KW - parental effects
KW - sawfly
KW - starvation
KW - transcriptome
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85128632371&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1086/719397
DO - 10.1086/719397
M3 - Article
SN - 0003-0147
VL - 199
SP - E229-E243
JO - The American Naturalist
JF - The American Naturalist
IS - 6
ER -