4.7 Article

The telomere regulatory gene POT1 responds to stress and predicts performance in nature: Implications for telomeres and life history evolution

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 23, Pages 6155-6171

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16237

Keywords

bird; corticosterone; growth; protection of telomeres 1; recruitment

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [T32HD049336]
  2. National Science Foundation [DBI--1460949, 1656109]
  3. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences [1656109] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Telomeres are emerging as important predictors of performance in fitness-related traits, with their dynamics potentially playing a more significant role than their length. The regulatory gene POT1, which influences telomere maintenance, is associated with female quality and ability to cope with environmental challenges, highlighting its potential role as a powerful modulator of life history strategies.
Telomeres are emerging as correlates of fitness-related traits and may be important mediators of ecologically relevant variation in life history strategies. Growing evidence suggests that telomere dynamics can be more predictive of performance than length itself, but very little work considers how telomere regulatory mechanisms respond to environmental challenges or influence performance in nature. Here, we combine observational and experimental data sets from free-living tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) to assess how performance is predicted by the telomere regulatory gene POT1, which encodes a shelterin protein that sterically blocks telomerase from repairing the telomere. First, we show that lower POT1 gene expression in the blood was associated with higher female quality, that is, earlier breeding and heavier body mass. We next challenged mothers with an immune stressor (lipopolysaccharide injection) that led to sickness in mothers and 24 h of food restriction in their offspring. While POT1 did not respond to maternal injection, females with lower constitutive POT1 gene expression were better able to maintain feeding rates following treatment. Maternal injection also generated a 1-day stressor for chicks, which responded with lower POT1 gene expression and elongated telomeres. Other putatively stress-responsive mechanisms (i.e., glucocorticoids, antioxidants) showed marginal responses in stress-exposed chicks. Model comparisons indicated that POT1 mRNA abundance was a largely better predictor of performance than telomere dynamics, indicating that telomere regulators may be powerful modulators of variation in life history strategies.

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