UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — An interdisciplinary team in Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences — in an initiative aimed at better understanding the implications of climate change for animal and plant life and agricultural systems — is focusing on an emerging field of study called landscape transcriptomics.
In an invited technical review paper recently published in Molecular Ecology Resources, team leader Jason Keagy, assistant research professor of wildlife behavioral ecology, explained that landscape transcriptomics studies how patterns of gene expression in living organisms relate to changes in environment — including habitat, weather, climate and contaminants — as well as the subsequent effects on the function of plants and animals.
He explained that a transcriptome is the total of all the RNA molecules expressed from the genes of an organism, essentially a collection of all the gene readouts present in a cell. By looking at finer-scale gene expression differences over larger-scale environments, trends emerge that offer new insight into how life on Earth is adapting to change, he said.
We sat down with Keagy to learn more about the new, complex field.
Q: What is landscape transcriptomics?
Keagy: Transcriptomics is the study of all the RNA molecules in a given tissue at a certain point in time. Why do we care about RNA? DNA is basically a memory-storage device. For a gene to actually do anything, the letters of DNA must be rewritten as letters of RNA and then translated into a protein.
We can literally read the RNA letters to find out which genes are active and how active they are. We can then ask: How is the active part of the DNA code affected by an environmental stressor? That’s where the landscape part comes in. Typically, we would do experiments to answer this question. But some things just can’t be studied well in the lab. Nature is messy and understanding that messiness is important.
So, what if we instead grabbed samples from across the landscape and asked how some variable — temperature, altitude, shade — influenced gene expression, the transcriptome? That, in a nutshell, is landscape transcriptomics.
Q: What can researchers accomplish using landscape transcriptomics?
Keagy: In the paper we just published, we outline three major areas of research that we envision landscape transcriptomics will address: understanding molecular pathways involved in response to the environment, generating and testing hypotheses about the mechanisms and evolution of these responses to the environment, and applying this knowledge to species conservation and management.