Epigenetic ecotypes in animals: persistent environmental adaptation in
the absence of genetic variation
Abstract
According to prevailing theory, sexually reproducing animals adapt to
different environments by the production of phenotypic variation from
the standing genetic variation and selection of the most suited
phenotypes. Contrary to all expectations, asexually reproducing animals
can also inhabit broad ranges of geographical latitudes, altitudes and
habitats, despite virtual genetic identity. Recent whole genome analyses
of differently adapted clonal populations and genetically impoverished
invaders revealed that they can use epigenetic variation instead of
genetic variation to stably adapt to different environments. The
required phenotypes are produced from the same DNA sequence via changes
in gene expression, which is trigged by strong environmental cues and
mediated by environment-sensitive epigenetic mechanisms like DNA
methylation. Habitat-specific epigenetic fingerprints were maintained
over subsequent years, pointing at the existence of epigenetic ecotypes.
Obviously, all animals can produce different phenotypes from the same
DNA sequence, but in asexually reproducing populations, genetically
impoverished invaders, sessile taxa and species with long generation
times it is apparently of prime importance. In contrast to beneficial
genetic mutations and meiotic gene combinations that require many
generations to be established in a population, environmentally-induced
epigenetic changes and subsequent alterations in gene and phenotype
expression affect population members synchronously in the first exposed
generation, providing an ideal means for fast, directional adaptation to
changing conditions. The production of different phenotypes from the
same genome in response to different environmental cues via epigenetic
mechanisms is also suitable to explain the “general-purpose genotype”
and the “genetic paradox of invasion”.