Abstract

Environment shapes development through a phenomenon called developmental plasticity. Deciphering its genetic basis has potential to shed light on the origin of novel traits and adaptation to environmental change. However, molecular studies are scarce, and little is known about molecular mechanisms associated with plasticity. We investigated the gene regulatory network controlling predatory vs. non-predatory dimorphism in the nematode Pristionchus pacificus and found that it consists of genes of extremely different age classes. We isolated mutants in the conserved nuclear hormone receptor nhr-1 with previously unseen phenotypic effects. They disrupt mouth-form determination and result in animals combining features of both wild-type morphs. In contrast, mutants in another conserved nuclear hormone receptor nhr-40 display altered morph ratios, but no intermediate morphology. Despite divergent modes of control, NHR-1 and NHR-40 share transcriptional targets, which encode extracellular proteins that have no orthologs in Caenorhabditis elegans and result from lineage-specific expansions. An array of transcriptional reporters revealed co-expression of all tested targets in the same pharyngeal gland cell. Major morphological changes in this gland cell accompanied the evolution of teeth and predation, linking rapid gene turnover with morphological innovations. Thus, the origin of feeding plasticity involved novelty at the level of genes, cells and behavior.

Highlights

  • Developmental plasticity is the ability to generate different phenotypes in response to environmental input [1]

  • We investigated the gene regulatory network controlling predatory vs. non-predatory dimorphism in the nematode Pristionchus pacificus and found that it consists of genes of extremely different age classes

  • To learn how plasticity works on the mechanistic genetic level, we investigated the roundworm Pristionchus pacificus

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Summary

Introduction

Developmental plasticity is the ability to generate different phenotypes in response to environmental input [1]. Even genetically identical individuals may develop distinct phenotypes, the most extreme example being castes in social insects [2]. Developmental plasticity is attracting considerable attention in the context of adaptation to climate change [3,4,5,6] and as a facilitator of evolutionary novelty [7,8,9,10,11]. The identification of gene regulatory networks (GRN) controlling plasticity will provide an understanding of development in novel environments and enable the testing of theories about the long-term evolutionary significance of plasticity

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