Seasonal plasticity: how do butterfly wing pattern traits evolve environmental responsiveness?

•Phenotypic plasticity in butterfly wings is widespread, and different wing pattern traits evolve plastic responses independently.•Seasonal plasticity in butterflies is mediated by the hormone ecdysone.•Ecdysone signaling has been shown to affect the chromatin landscape in other insect species.•New...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current opinion in genetics & development 2021-08, Vol.69, p.82-87
Hauptverfasser: van der Burg, Karin RL, Reed, Robert D
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Phenotypic plasticity in butterfly wings is widespread, and different wing pattern traits evolve plastic responses independently.•Seasonal plasticity in butterflies is mediated by the hormone ecdysone.•Ecdysone signaling has been shown to affect the chromatin landscape in other insect species.•New methods will enable us to explore the role of ecdysone-mediated chromatin remodeling in the evolution of seasonal plasticity in butterflies. Phenotypic plasticity in response to environmental cues is common in butterflies, and is a major driver of butterfly wing pattern diversity. The endocrine signal ecdysone has been revealed as a major modulator of plasticity in butterflies. External cues such as day length or temperature are translated internally into variation in ecdysone titers, which in turn lead to alternate phenotypes such as seasonal wing patterns. Here we review the evidence showing that ecdysone-mediated plasticity of different wing pattern features such as wing color and eyespot size can evolve independently. Recent studies show that ecdysone regulates gene expression in Drosophila melanogaster via a chromatin remodeling mechanism. We thus propose that environmentally responsive ecdysone titers in butterflies may also function via chromatin regulation to promote different seasonal phenotypes. We present a model of ecdysone response evolution that integrates both gene regulatory architecture and organismal development, and propose a set of testable mechanistic hypotheses for how plastic response profiles of specific genes can evolve.
ISSN:0959-437X
1879-0380
DOI:10.1016/j.gde.2021.02.009