Charlie Kortleven Rose Hills
Temperature-Mediated Transgenerational Plasticity in Mimulus
As atmospheric CO2 concentrations rise, rapid environmental shifts have led to more frequent and severe droughts. Some plants have demonstrated the capacity for rapid acclimation to abiotic stressors; however, the extent to which these responses are retained and transmitted across generations remains unclear.
This study aims to explore how parental effects, potentially mediated by epigenetic modifications such as DNA methylation, prime offspring to cope with similar stressful environments before experiencing them directly, by altering gene expression—a process often implicated in phenotypic plasticity.
To understand the mechanisms underlying transgenerational plasticity in Mimulus laciniatus, I will rely on remote supercomputing and molecular techniques for Quantitative Trait Loci (QTL) mapping, transcriptomic analyses, and characterizing the relationship between differential gene expression and potentially adaptive genomic regions.
This research seeks to determine the influence of genetic variation and parental environment on shaping locally adaptive responses within and between generations, aiding conservation efforts to better predict plant responses to climate change.