Figures
Abstract
Individuals of widely spread species are expected to show local adaption in temperature tolerance as they encounter a range of thermal conditions. We tracked thermal adaptations of the Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) that invaded Europe within the last 100 years. It has occupied various conditions although, like the majority of invasive species, it lost a measurable amount of neutral genetic variation due to bottleneck effect when it invaded Europe. We exposed diapausing beetles originated from three different latitudes (54°N, 59°N, 60°N) to cold shock (−5°C, 1.5 hrs) in order to test if beetles from the northern populations express differential levels of cold-induced and constitutive Hsp70 compared to the beetles from milder temperature regime. The level of cold-induced Hsp70 was lowest in the northernmost beetle populations while the level of constitutive Hsp70 did not differ with the population. Moreover, the southernmost beetles were more plastic in their response to cold shock than the northernmost beetles. These results suggest that physiological adaptation, like the synthesis of Hsp70, can evolve very quickly.
Citation: Lyytinen A, Mappes J, Lindström L (2012) Variation in Hsp70 Levels after Cold Shock: Signs of Evolutionary Responses to Thermal Selection among Leptinotarsa decemlineata Populations. PLoS ONE 7(2): e31446. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031446
Editor: Suzannah Rutherford, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, United States of America
Received: April 21, 2011; Accepted: January 9, 2012; Published: February 2, 2012
Copyright: © 2012 Lyytinen et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Funding: This research project was supported by funds from the Academy of Finland (n:o: 108335, 118456/131406) and the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Introduction
Why certain species occupy wide geographical areas whereas others are found in relatively small areas is a fundamental question in ecology. Especially harmful to insects are even brief exposures to sub-zero temperatures, i.e. cold shock, which can cause chill injuries [1]. Mortality is associated with protein denaturation [2], not due to internal ice formation as in freezing. Organisms have evolved several mechanisms to prevent these harmful changes. For example, heat shock proteins (Hsps, also referred to as stress proteins) are an example of adaptive phenotypic plasticity in inducible tolerance to environment. They can be induced by high or low temperatures [3] when they prevent aggregation of stress-denatured proteins and assist in refolding proteins to their native state [4], [5] thereby enhancing tolerance to various thermal stressors [6], [7].
Although the induction of Hsp synthesis by elevated temperatures has been intensively studied, only a few studies have focused on low temperatures [8]. Furthermore, as Karl et al. [9] pointed out, the role of Hsps in thermal adaptation has been investigated only in a few non-model species in terrestrial arthropods. The implication of the variation between conspecifics of different geographical origin for species distribution has not been widely assessed. Species also differ in whether Hsp70 is up-regulated during overwintering diapause but the reason for this interspecific variation is still unknown [10].
We studied the within species variation in the level of the Hsp70 in the diapausing Colorado potato beetles, Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae, Say), of different geographic origin. L. decemlineata is ideally suited for the investigation because it has gone through population bottleneck(s) while spreading from US to Europe, resulting in low neutral genetic variability [11]. Thus, it offers an opportunity to compare inter-populational differences and evolution of phenotypic plasticity in Hsp70 levels in species with low genetic variation. In such species phenotypic plasticity has been suggested to play a significant role in climatic adaptation [12]–[14]. In our experiment, diapausing beetles were exposed to ecologically relevant cold stress (−5°C) (see also [15]). Although L. decemlineata overwinters as an adult digging into the substrate, it still can be exposed to harmful environmental temperature. In the north of Europe, the depth of the frozen soil varies with year and place and, consequently, the optimum depth is unpredictable and exposure to cold is possible. We predicted that beetles originated from the north of Europe would express a lowered level of Hsp70. This is because Hsp production incurs significant costs albeit being beneficial [16], [17] and consequently organisms living in harsh environment might have evolved other, less costly mechanism to cope with cold [7], [18], [19].
Materials and Methods
Experiment on latitudinal variation
Colorado potato beetles originated from three different populations: Bonin (Poland, 54°09′N, 16°15′E), St. Petersburg (Russia, 59°54′N, 30°40′E), and Lodeynoye Pole (Russia, 60°44′N, 33°36′E) (Fig. 1). The distance between south and north populations is about 1 300 km and the total north-to-south distance is about 700 km. We could consider the populations to be separate ones because gene flow is low among European populations [11]. Collection sites vary in the mean monthly temperature and range of temperature in winter (Table 1). The beetles were imported and maintained in the laboratory under permission of the Finnish Safety Authority (Evira). The parent beetles that were descendents of field collected adult beetles overwintered in the laboratory after which they were allowed to lay eggs. Thus all the beetles used in the experiment were 2nd laboratory generation, which might have changed Hsp70 levels (see [20]) but on the other hand, diminished the impact of maternal effects [21]. In order to test the hypothesis of the impact of laboratory rearing conditions, we also reared beetles from one population which were collected on two consecutive years (Lodeynoye Pole, Russia). Thus, one set of individuals was the second laboratory generation while the other set consisted of beetles hatched from the eggs that were collected in the same year as the experiment was performed. Larvae were reared in a greenhouse in cages on potted potato plants (variety Van Gogh) until emerging. Newly emerged adults were weighed, sexed, and moved to climate chambers under long-day conditions (16∶8, light∶dark) at 23°C. There beetles were allowed to feed on detached potato leaves (variety Van Gogh) for 2 weeks and then transferred individually to jars (4 cm diameter, 6 cm depth), filled with peat, and placed at the climate chamber in which diurnal mean temperature was 17°C in order to induce diapause. The temperature was 20°C during the 16 hours of the photophase, and 13°C during of the 4 hours of the darkness. The lights were dimmed gradually during 2 hours before and after the photophase, imitating the sunrise and sunset. During these hours, also the temperature slowly changed to the target temperature. When beetles had dug into the peat, they were transferred to the temperature of 5°C where they overwintered. If beetles did not dig into the soil within 10 day after transferring to 17°C, they were transferred first to 10°C for 5 days and then to 5°C.
The distance between south and north populations is about 1 300 km and the total north-to-south distance is about 700 km.
Cold shock treatment
The experiment was started when adult beetles had been in the overwintering diapause for 150 days. The sampling time corresponds to the midpoint of the diapause period in the northern part of the range. Half of beetles of each origin balanced with emergence weight was assigned to cold shock (Bonin: n = 8; St. Petersburg: n = 7; Lodeynoye Pole: n = 16) and control treatments (Bonin: n = 8; St. Petersburg: n = 8; Lodeynoye Pole: n = 14). In the cold shock treatment, beetles were exposed to −5°C for 1.5 hours, which is a sub-lethal temperature for L. decemlineata (none of the beetles died) and above their supercooling point [22]. After the cold shock they were allowed to recover at 5°C for 1.5 hours before being frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at −80°C until Hsp70 analysis. In order to determine the constitutive level of Hsp70, control beetles were maintained at 5°C.
Determining the total protein concentration
The beetles without elytra were weighed and homogenized in lysis buffer (1 mM EDTA, 0.5% Triton X-100, 10 µg/ml Leupeptin, 10 µg/ml Pepstatin, 100 µM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), 3 µg/ml Aprotinin in phosphate buffered saline, PBS). Homogenising was done on ice. After the homogenates were vortexed and left for 15 min on ice, they were centrifuged for 105 min at 16000 g at 4°C. The total protein concentration of the resulting supernatant was determined for 160 µl samples in triplicate (dilutions: 1∶500, 1∶1000, 1∶2000) by using a microassay procedure for microtiter plates according to the manufacturer's instructions (Bio-Rad Protein Assay). The reference protein samples were made of bovine serum albumin (BSA) diluted in PBS: 0, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, 60, and 80 µg/ml. Absorbance was measured with microplate photometer (Multiskan Ascent, Thermo Labsystems). The samples were stored at −85°C until needed.
Protein separation by SDS-PAGE
Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE (Mini-PROTEAN Tetra Cell, Bio-Rad). The samples were diluted to a protein concentration of 2.5 mg/ml in PBS. Sample buffer was added to the samples in a ratio 1∶1 of the total volume to sample buffer and samples were denatured with sample buffer for 5 min at 95°C. An equal volume of each sample (2.5 mg/ml) and 50 ng/µl Hsp70 (recombinant human, NSP-555, StressGen Biotechnologies) were loaded on a gel. To control gel-to-gel variation, samples from each experimental group were divided among several gels and loaded on the gel in random order. High range of molecule weight standards (SDS-PAGE Molecular Weight Standards, Bio-Rad Laboratories) was also loaded on a gel. The gel was composed of 10% acrylamide separating gel (pH 8.8) topped by 5% stacking gel (pH 6.8). Electrophoresis was carried out at 80 V for 40 min and at 110 V for 3 h in electrophoresis buffer.
Western blot analysis
Western blot assay was employed to detect the level of Hsp70 (Fig. 2). The samples were electroblotted onto nitrocellulose membrane (Whatman) according to the standard protocol. The blotting was carried out at constant current of 100 V in transfer buffer on ice for 2 hours. The blot was washed in 1×TBS for 5 min, stained with 0.2% Ponceau S for 5 min, and then rinsed briefly in de-ionized water. The blot was blocked with 5% non-fat dry milk TBS solution overnight at 4°C with constant shaking. Then blot was washed in TBS-Tween for 5 min and incubated with primary monoclonal antibody Hsp70 (1∶5000) in 5% non-fat dry milk TBS–Tween solution for 3 h with constant shaking. To locate Hsp70, mouse monoclonal anti-heat shock protein 70 (H-5147, Sigma, Missouri, USA) which reacts against Hsp70 and localizes both the constitutive (Hsp73) and inducible (Hsp72) forms of Hsp70. After the blot was washed three times in TBS-T for 5 min each, it was incubated with secondary antibody, Anti-Mouse IgG, for 2 h. The blot was washed three times in TBS-T for 5 min each. After washing, the blot was incubated at room temperature in APA buffer (pH 9.8) for 5 min. 5-bromo-4-cloro-3-indolyl phosphate (BCIP) and nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) with APA buffer were used to visualize the bound antibodies. The gel was stained by Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 for 10 min and washed in 10% CH3COOH with constant shaking overnight.
Lines 1–2 show induced Hsp70 class protein, lines 3–4 constitutive Hsp70 and line 5 a 70 kD size.
Determining the Hsp70 concentration
The intensity of blots was measured by ImageJ 1.40. Band size and intensities of samples were compared with bands of a serial dilution of pure Hsp70 (25, 37.5, and 50 ng/µl) loaded onto each gel. We used the serial dilution to create a standard curve and estimated the concentration of Hsp70 for each beetle by linear regression.
Results
As no significant differences in the Hsp70 level were found between the field and laboratory-derived populations from Lodeynoye Pole (2-way-ANOVA: F1, 26 = 0.305, p = 0.858), the two years were pooled for the further statistical analyses. A three-way ANOVA was employed to analyze the effects of the fixed factors treatment (control, cold shock), sex, and population (Bonin (54°N), St. Petersburg (59°N), Lodeynoye Pole (60°N)) on the Hsp70 level. Only interaction between the population and treatment was included in the final model. Other non-significant two- and three-way interactions (p≥0.275) were not included in the final model. There was no interaction between the three populations and cold treatment, indicating that all populations responded similarly to the cold shock treatment (3-way-ANOVA: F2, 54 = 0.355, p = 0.703; Fig. 3). This suggests that there is no change in the reaction norm among these three populations. The cold shock treatment increased Hsp70 (F1, 54 = 4.052, p = 0.049), without significant effects between males and females (F1, 54 = 3.539, p = 0.065). Hsp70 level varied more among populations (F2, 54 = 4.826, p = 0.012) with expression higher in beetles originating from the south (Poland, 54°N) than those from the north (LSD, St. Petersburg, (59°N): p = 0.015 or Lodeynoye Pole (60°N): p = 0.005). Hsp70 levels between the two northernmost populations, St Petersburg and Lodeynoye Pole, were the same (p = 0.996).
Reaction norms of Hsp70 levels (µg ± s.e.) in the control and cold shock treated beetles from three different populations: Poland (54°N), St. Petersburg (59°N), and Lodeynoye Pole (60°N).
Discussion
To occupy large geographical areas, organisms must evolve several mechanisms to avoid or tolerate stressful conditions. One mechanism to achieve stress tolerance is to synthesize Hsp70 as a response to a stressor. Diapausing L. decemlineata seemed to rely on this cold tolerance mechanism as it responded to thermal cold stress by up-regulating Hsp70 (see also [22]). The increase in Hsp70 level was more pronounced in the southern population that relatively seldom experiences such temperature than in the northern beetles. Thus our results lend support to the hypothesis that the production of Hsp70 as a response to temperature shock is less intense in organisms which are more frequently exposed to unfavorable temperatures in their habitat than those occupying benign conditions [7], [18], [19].
Beetles from different populations showed differential cold shock response. The populations have diverged from each other relatively recently; beetles arrived in Poland in 1950's [23] and Lodeynoye Pole (Russia) in 1990's [24]. Hence one might expect that insufficient time has elapsed since the populations diverged from each other to be able to detect inter-populational differences. Simply, due to the invasion history [11], one could have assumed that there would have not be enough genetic variability left to respond to selection to cold. In fact, the European populations have been shown to have low neutral genetic variability [11] and low additive genetic variability in physiological traits [25] although there is some genetic variability left in life-history traits [26], [27]. Differences in temperature exposure encountered during diapauses at the three sites are not large (Table 1) but the selection pressure seems to be strong enough to result in differences in cold response.
It is noteworthy that not all diapausing insects respond to stressor by upregulating Hsp70 [28], because Hsp production has been shown to incur significant costs [16], [17]. Inter-populational differences in Hsp70 upregulation shown in L. decemlineata might be a result of selection favoring other less costly mechanisms to cope with cold in the north as suggested in heat-shocked Drosophila flies [7], [18], [19]. One should note that there might be a mismatch between sampling time and the onset of Hsp70 synthesis which can differ with the severity of the shock [22] and the geographical origin of a population [29]. The severity of stress can also affect the Hsp70 level [22], [28]. We measured the Hsp70 level at only one time point and hence we might have missed the peak of the synthesis. We can rule out the potential effects of the laboratory rearing conditions on the threshold temperature for Hsp70 induction and the Hsp70 level [3], [20], [30], [31]. We collected eggs from the very same field in Russia (Lodeynoye Pole, 60°N) as the parental generation and reared them into adulthood in the laboratory. As no differences in the level of Hsp70 were observed between the laboratory-reared and field-collected populations, it is unlikely that the laboratory rearing conditions had major effects on Hsp70 level. Therefore the difference we observed in Hsp70 expression can best be explained by selection on the population due to climatic variation experienced by the beetles.
Acknowledgments
We thank M. Koivula, S. Piiroinen, and J. Timonen for assistance in rearing beetles, K. Liukkunen and E. Virtanen for analysing the samples and S. Boman, P. Honkala, M. Pawinska for assistance in collecting the beetles, and Bob Krebs for valuable comments. The Centre of Excellence in Evolutionary Research provided laboratory facilities.
Author Contributions
Conceived and designed the experiments: AL JM LL. Performed the experiments: AL JM LL. Analyzed the data: AL JM LL. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: AL JM LL. Wrote the paper: AL JM LL.
References
- 1. Zachariassen KE (1985) Physiology of cold tolerance in insects. Physiological Review 65: 799–832.
- 2.
Watson P, Morris G (1987) Cold shock injury in animals. In: Bowler K, Fuller B, editors. Temperature and animal cells. Cambridge: The Company of Biologist Limited. pp. 311–340.
- 3. Goto SG, Kimura MT (1998) Heat- and cold-shock responses and temperature adaptations in subtropical and temperate species of Drosophila. Journal of Insect Physiology 44: 1233–1239.
- 4.
Hochachka PW, Somero GN (2002) Biochemical adaptation: Mechanism and process in physiological evolution. New York: Oxford University Press. 466 p.
- 5. Feder ME, Hoffmann GE (1999) Heat-shock proteins, molecular chaperones, and the stress response: evolutionary and ecological physiology. Annual Review in Physiology 61: 243–282.
- 6. Lindquist S (1986) The heat-shock response. Annual Review in Biochemistry 55: 1151–1191.
- 7. Sørensen J, Dahlgraad J, Loeschcke V (2001) Genetic variation in thermal tolerance among natural populations of Drosophila buzzatii: down regulation of Hsp70 expression and variation in heat stress resistance traits. Functional Ecology 15: 289–296.
- 8. Sørensen J, Kristensen TN, Loeschcke V (2003) The evolutionary and ecological role of heat shock proteins. Ecology Letters 6: 1025–1037.
- 9. Karl I, Sorensen JG, Loeschcke V, Fischer K (2009) HSP70 expression in the Copper butterfly Lycaena tityrus across altitudes and temperatures. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 22: 172–178.
- 10. Zhang Q, Denlinger DL (2010) Molecular characterization of heat shock protein 90, 70 and 70 cognate cDNAs and their expression patterns during thermal stress and pupal diapause in the corn earworm. Journal of Insect Physiology 56: 138–150.
- 11. Grapputo A, Boman S, Lindström L, Lyytinen A, Mappes J (2005) The voyage of an invasive species across continents: genetic diversity of North American and European Colorado potato beetle populations. Molecular Ecology 14: 4207–4219.
- 12. Ghalambor CK, Mckay JK, Carroll SP, Reznick DN (2007) Adaptive versus non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity and the potential for contemporary adaptation in new environments. Functional Ecology 21: 394–407.
- 13. Richards CL, Bossdorf O, Muth NZ, Gurevitch J, Pigliucci M (2006) Jack of all trades, master of some? On the role of phenotypic plasticity in plant invasions. Ecology Letters 9: 981–993.
- 14. Sexton JP, McKay JK, Sala A (2002) Plasticity and genetic diversity may allow saltcedar to invade cold climate in North America. Ecological Applications 12: 1652–1660.
- 15. Hiiesaar K, Kuusik A, Jõudu J, Metspalu L, Hermann P (2001) Laboratory experiments on cold acclimation in overwintering Colorado potato beetles, Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say). Norwegian Journal of Entomology 48: 87–90.
- 16. Krebs RA, Loeschcke V (1994) Costs and benefits of activation of the heat-shock response in Drosophila melanogaster. Functional Ecology 8: 730–737.
- 17. Feder JH, Rossi JM, Solomon J, Solomon N, Lindquist S (1992) The consequences of expressing hsp70 in Drosophila cells at normal temperatures. Genes and Development 6: 1402–1413.
- 18. Lansing E, Justesen J, Loeschcke V (2000) Variation in the expression of Hsp70, the major heat-shock protein, and thermotolerance in larval and adult selection lines of Drosophila melanogaster. Journal of Thermal Biology 25: 443–450.
- 19. Sørensen JG, Michalak P, Justesen J, Loeschcke V (1999) Expression of the heat-shock protein HSP70 in Drosophila buzzatii lines selected for thermal resistance. Hereditas 131: 155–164.
- 20. Buckley BA, Owen M-E, Hofmann GE (2001) Adjusting the thermostat: the threshold induction temperature for the heat-shock response in intertidal mussels (genus Mytilus) changes as a function of thermal history. Journal of Experimental Biology 204: 3571–3579.
- 21. Kawecki TJ, Ebert D (2004) Conceptual issues in local adaptation. Ecology Letters 7: 1225–1241.
- 22. Yocum GD (2001) Differential expression of two HSP70 transcripts in response to cold shock, thermoperiod, and adult diapause in the Colorado potato beetle. Journal of Insect Physiology 47: 1139–1145.
- 23. Johnson CG (1967) International dispersal of insects and insect-borne viruses. European Journal of Plant Pathology 73: 21–43.
- 24. Vilkova NA, Sukhoruchenko GI, Fasulati SR (2005) Strategy for crop protection from phytophagous insects of adventive species exemplified for the Colorado potato beetle. Plant Protection News 1: 3–15.
- 25. Piiroinen S, Ketola T, Lyytinen A, Lindström L (2011) Energy use, diapause behaviour and northern range expansion potential in the invasive Colorado potato beetle. Functional Ecology 25: 527–536.
- 26. Boman S, Grapputo A, Lindström L, Lyytinen A, Mappes J (2008) Quantitative genetic approach for assessing invasiveness: geographic and genetic variation in life-history traits. Biological Invasions 10: 1135–1145.
- 27. Lyytinen A, Lindström L, Mappes J (2008) Genetic variation in growth and development time under two selective environments in Leptinotarsa decemlineata. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata 127: 157–167.
- 28. Rinehart JP, Yocum GD, Denlinger DL (2000) Development upregulation of inducible hsp70 transcripts, but not the congate form, during pupal diapause in the flesh fly, Sacrophaga crassipalpis. Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 30: 515–521.
- 29. Maisov A, Podlipaeva Y, Kipyatkov V (2007) Expression of stress proteins of HSP70 family in response to cold in Myrmica ants from various geographic populations. Cell and Tissue Biology 1: 434–438.
- 30. Tomanek L, Somero GN (1999) Evolutionary and acclimation-induced variation in the heat-shock responses of congeneric snails (Genus Tegula) from different thermal habitats: implications for limits of thermotolerance and biogeography. The Journal of Experimental Biology 202: 2925–2936.
- 31. Barua D, Heckathorn SA (2004) Acclimation of the temperature set-points of the heat-shock response. Journal of Thermal Biology 29: 185–193.