Final Report Summary - GEBACC (Genetic and epigenetic basis of adaptation to climate change)
In the last two and a half years (excluding my maternity leave) since the start of the project late 2009, I have successfully established a wild-caught breeding population of xenopus tropicalis frogs which I have brought back from Cameroon. I have collected whole-organismal as well as tissue-level data on the locomotor abilities in these frogs. This work has already given rise to four publications (Herrel and Bonneaud Journal of Experimental Biology 2012a; Herrel and Bonneaud Journal of Experimental Biology 2012b; Herrel, Gonwouo, Fokam, Ngundy, and Bonneaud Journal of Zoology 2012; James, Tallis, Herrel and Bonneaud Journal of Experimental Biology 2012). However, in mid 2011, the frogs had to be transferred to a new facility at the National Museum of Natural History in Paris due to problems with the set-up at the Station d' Ecologie Expérimentale in Moulis. For this reason, I have only just recently started to selectively breed the frogs again based on their locomotor ability; this breeding programme has currently been halted.
Given the difficulties encountered with x. tropicalis, I initiated a collaboration with Dr Michel Baguette (MNHN) and Prof. Jean Clobert (CNRS), both at the Station d' Ecologie Experimentale, to investigate similar questions as the ones proposed in GEBACC, but this time using model systems in ecology and evolution: a butterfly (pieris brassicae) and a lizard (lacerta vivipara). Dr Baguette and his postdoc, Dr Delphine Legrand, are in charge of catching wild butterflies, phenotyping them for locomotor ability (endurance) and selectively breeding them for increased endurance. We have already successfully obtained one generation and I am now poised to examine the association between expression patterns of candidate genes and phenotypic differences, as well as the heritability of endurance. While Dr Legrand is helping run candidate gene assays, I am about to sequence the full transcriptome of individuals of extreme phenotypes (using Illumina next-generation sequencing technology) from a complementary deoxyribonucleic acid (cDNA) library that I constructed, with the goal of generating a reference transcriptome on which future transcriptome-wide gene expression studies will be based.
Early 2012, I successfully secured a permanent lectureship position at the very prestigious University of Exeter, United Kingdom (UK), which was to start on 1 September 2012; the University of Exeter has very recently joined the Russell group of leading research-led universities in the UK and has been named 'University of the year' by the Sunday Times. This excellent news was however dampened in August 2012, when I suddenly found out that my Marie Curie funding was going to be unexpectedly cut back by 35 % as a result of my move to Exeter and that I would not be getting the remaining EUR 35 937.50 that I had been awarded end of 2009. While I cannot understand the logic of cutting funding over half way into a project, this means that I no longer have the anticipated funds to cover the costs of all the remaining work planned. As a result, I am unable to finish off the genomics analyses, as well as obtain bioinformatics support to analyse the data obtained so far. Thus all the work achieved so far and all the publications resulting from this work and currently in preparation have been put on hold indeterminately.