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Telomere length is highly heritable and independent of growth rate manipulated by temperature in field crickets

Authors :
Paul E. Hopwood
Erica Zuidersma
Alastair J. Wilson
Jelle J. Boonekamp
Ellis Mulder
Rolando Rodríguez-Muñoz
Tom Tregenza
Simon Verhulst
Verhulst lab
Behavioural & Physiological Ecology
Source :
bioRxiv, Molecular Ecology, 31(23), 6128-6140. Wiley
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Many organisms are capable of growing faster than they do. Restrained growth rate has functionally been explained by negative effects on lifespan of accelerated growth. However, the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Telomere attrition has been proposed as a causal agent and has been studied in endothermic vertebrates. We established that telomeres exist as chromosomal-ends in a model insect, the field cricket, using terminal restriction fragment andBal 31methods. Telomeres comprised TTAGGn repeats of 38kb on average, more than four times longer than the telomeres of human infants.Bal 31assays confirmed that telomeric repeats were located at the chromosome-ends. We tested whether rapid growth is achieved at the expense of telomere length by comparing crickets reared at 23°C with their siblings reared at 28°C, which grew three times faster. Surprisingly, neither temperature treatment nor age affected average telomere length. Concomitantly, the broad sense heritability of telomere length was remarkably high at ~100%. Despite high heritability, the evolvability (a mean standardized measure of genetic variance) was low relative to that of body mass. We discuss the different interpretations of these scaling methods in the context of telomere evolution. It is clear that some important features of vertebrate telomere biology are evident in an insect species dating back to the Triassic, but also that there are some striking differences. The apparent lack of an effect of growth rate and the total number of cell divisions on telomere length is puzzling, suggesting that telomere length could be actively maintained during the growth phase. Whether such maintenance of telomere length is adaptive remains elusive and requires further study investigating the links with fitness in the wild.

Details

ISSN :
09621083
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv, Molecular Ecology, 31(23), 6128-6140. Wiley
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....937afb76fd2e86afc9f66f1a0f81461b