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Differential DNA methylation across environments has no effect on gene expression in the eastern oyster

Authors :
Kyle Sirovy
Morgan Kelly
Kevin Marquez Johnson
Source :
Journal of Animal Ecology. 91:1135-1147
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

It has been hypothesized that environmentally induced changes to gene body methylation could facilitate adaptive transgenerational responses to changing environments. We compared patterns of global gene expression (Tag-seq) and gene body methylation (reduced representation bisulfite sequencing) in 80 eastern oysters Crassostrea virginica from six full-sib families, common gardened for 14 months at two sites in the northern Gulf of Mexico that differed in mean salinity. At the time of sampling, oysters from the two sites differed in mass by 60% and in parasite loads by nearly two orders of magnitude. They also differentially expressed 35% of measured transcripts. However, we observed differential methylation at only 1.4% of potentially methylated loci in comparisons between individuals from these different environments, and little correspondence between differential methylation and differential gene expression. Instead, methylation patterns were largely driven by genetic differences among families, with a PERMANOVA analysis indicating nearly a two orders of magnitude greater number of genes differentially methylated between families than between environments. An analysis of CpG observed/expected values (CpG O/E) across the C. virginica genome showed a distinct bimodal distribution, with genes from the first cluster showing the lower CpG O/E values, greater methylation and higher and more stable gene expression, while genes from the second cluster showed lower methylation, and lower and more variable gene expression. Taken together, the differential methylation results suggest that only a small portion of the C. virginica genome is affected by environmentally induced changes in methylation. At this point, there is little evidence to suggest that environmentally induced methylation states would play a leading role in regulating gene expression responses to new environments.

Details

ISSN :
13652656 and 00218790
Volume :
91
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Animal Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....04fd632dc6539123783d056311f0f953
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13645