Telomeres as biomarkers of cost and quality in a wild vertebrate population

Lead Research Organisation: University of East Anglia
Department Name: Biological Sciences

Abstract

Because resources, and the time it take to acquire them, are limited, every organism has a finite amount it can use in its efforts to survive and reproduce. Resources spent on one area, such as health, cannot be spent on another, such as in reproduction. Consequently organisms must trade off how best to spend their resources so as to maximise the benefits they gain. Such trade-offs are central to our understanding of the evolution of different life-history strategies, i.e. why organisms differ in aspects such as their size, reproductive rate and lifespan / a fundamental question in biology. The problem is that, although it is often relatively easy to assess the benefit to an organism of investing in one area, to understand trade-offs we also need to know the associated cost. Unfortunately, measuring such costs has proved to be extremely difficult, especially in animals in the wild. Furthermore, working out which mechanisms link the costs of alternative investments, and mediate trade-offs between areas of investment, or across the lifetime of an organism, has proved beyond us. Telomeres are long, specialized regions of DNA that protect the ends of chromosomes and prevent the cells' genes from getting damaged or mixed up each time the cell replicates. However, a section of telomere is lost during each replication and when telomeres reach a critical, short length the cell stops functioning. The accumulation of these dysfunctional cells in the bodies' tissues is thought to lead to ageing and senescence. Importantly the rate at which telomeres shorten is also greatly affected by oxidative stress / the organism's inability to cope with the damaging waste products (free radicals) of metabolism. Oxidative stress (and/or telomere shortening) has been shown to be influenced by life history and environmental stresses (e.g. accelerated growth or infection). Telomere shortening can, therefore, indicate the biological cost that such stresses exact on an individual and provide an important link between these costs and ageing and senescence. We plan to use the unique dataset compiled on the Seychelles warblers to take the opportunity to undertake a longitudinal study of telomeres within individuals in a wild vertebrate population. We are only able to do this because the intensive long-term study of island populations of this species means that highly detailed information is available on the environmental factors experienced and reproductive investments made. Importantly, annual blood samples have been collected from many individuals of known age throughout their lives. First, we will focus on whether telomere shortening can be used as a measure of biological ageing in a wild population. Key to this is confirming that age-related lengths of an individual's telomeres predicts lifespan (and/or senescence) in the Seychelles warbler. We will then investigate the relative costs of different stresses by relating the annual telomere-shortening rate to the stresses they have faced in that year. Experimental manipulations will allow us to hone in on specific factors, such as reproductive effort. Importantly, costs will be measured with generic units of currency (telomere shortening rates) that would allow comparisons, not only between stresses, but also with respect to the age and life-history stage at which they are experienced. This will allow us to compare how the costs and benefits of investment in different life-history components, or in dealing with environmental stresses, are traded off. Finally, we will test the idea that individual variation in telomere shortening rate can reflect an individual's ability to withstand these stresses and, therefore, provide an indicator of individual quality.

Publications

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Barrett EL (2011) Sex differences in telomeres and lifespan. in Aging cell

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Bebbington K (2018) Joint care can outweigh costs of nonkin competition in communal breeders. in Behavioral ecology : official journal of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology

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Bebbington K (2017) Kinship and familiarity mitigate costs of social conflict between Seychelles warbler neighbors. in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

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Bebbington K (2017) Corrigendum. in Molecular ecology

 
Description Overall aim: to determine if telomeres can be used to measure and compare the costs that individuals pay when participating in different activities/experiences in their natural setting.

The original method proposed for measuring telomeres proved to be inefficient and did not allow us to fully utilise our archived samples. Consequently we adapted a method, devised in humans, to create a new protocol which is of utility for archived samples across Aves (Barrett et al. 2012a; Absolute standards as a useful addition to the avian quantitative PCR telomere assay. J Avian Biol 43: 571-576.).

The overall key finding was that age controlled measures of telomere repeats could predict an individuals future probability of mortality and lifespan. Thus telomeres can act as a biomarker of ageing in a wild population

We completed the first study into life-long telomere dynamics and their relationship to mortality in natural conditions (Barrett et al. 2012b; Telomere dynamics predict survival in a life-long longitudinal wild study. Mol Ecol 22: 249-259.) We measured within- and between-individual variation in telomere shortening (Obj 1) and identified factors that influence it (Obj 2 and 3). Importantly we showed that shorter telomeres and greater telomere shortening predicted future mortality (Obj 5). These results provide the first unambiguous evidence of a relationship between telomere length and mortality in the wild, and substantiate the prediction that telomere length and shortening rate can act as an indicators of biological age further to chronological age when exploring life history questions in natural conditions. This publication received massive press attention and generated various TV, radio and newspaper articles both nationally and internationally (including articles for NERC).



We realised that many conclusions regarding the role of telomere dynamics in ageing, drawn by studies focusing on humans, did not hold up when the evidence from other vertebrates was taken into consideration. To highlight this, and our own new insights (relating to Obj 4) we published a review and meta-analysis (Barrett & Richardson 2011; Sex differences in telomeres and lifespan. Aging Cell 10: 913-921). This publication led to a BBC radio interview
Exploitation Route understanding the link between stress telomere shortening and ageing under natural settings can be of huge importance to medical and veterinary health issues.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment,Healthcare,Other

 
Description trans-generational impacts on senescence
Amount £529,000 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/K005502/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2013 
End 11/2016
 
Title Seychelles warbler database 
Description an access database of all the information collected by the international seychelles warbler group over the last 15 years incvluding the behavioural fitness and genetic data 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2006 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact additional long term research above and beyond that outlined in the original grants 
 
Description Diversity in Telomeres group 
Organisation University of Edinburgh
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution on organising body for the Diversity in Telomeres group - contributing to symposia, workshops and journal special issues to generate growth and understanding in this field
Collaborator Contribution on organising body for the Diversity in Telomeres group - contributing to symposia, workshops and journal special issues to generate growth and understanding in this field
Impact annual diversity in telomeres conference special issue of Philosophical transactions of the london society Journal
Start Year 2015
 
Description Diversity in Telomeres group 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution on organising body for the Diversity in Telomeres group - contributing to symposia, workshops and journal special issues to generate growth and understanding in this field
Collaborator Contribution on organising body for the Diversity in Telomeres group - contributing to symposia, workshops and journal special issues to generate growth and understanding in this field
Impact annual diversity in telomeres conference special issue of Philosophical transactions of the london society Journal
Start Year 2015
 
Description Diversity in Telomeres group 
Organisation University of Groningen
Country Netherlands 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution on organising body for the Diversity in Telomeres group - contributing to symposia, workshops and journal special issues to generate growth and understanding in this field
Collaborator Contribution on organising body for the Diversity in Telomeres group - contributing to symposia, workshops and journal special issues to generate growth and understanding in this field
Impact annual diversity in telomeres conference special issue of Philosophical transactions of the london society Journal
Start Year 2015
 
Description Seychelles Warbler Research Group 
Organisation University of Groningen
Department Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences
Country Netherlands 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We collaborate on running and using this long term model system. And the database that results from that. Fieldwork, key genetical data (MHC, Telomere, genotyping)
Collaborator Contribution Field work Molecular expertise Long term data Molecular Data Database management
Impact All the papers we produce are , to a greater or lesser degree, the result of this collaboration on mainlining this long term system
 
Description Seychelles Warbler Research Group 
Organisation University of Sheffield
Department Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We collaborate on running and using this long term model system. And the database that results from that. Fieldwork, key genetical data (MHC, Telomere, genotyping)
Collaborator Contribution Field work Molecular expertise Long term data Molecular Data Database management
Impact All the papers we produce are , to a greater or lesser degree, the result of this collaboration on mainlining this long term system
 
Description Nature Seychelles Magazine 
Form Of Engagement Activity A magazine, newsletter or online publication
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Third sector organisations
Results and Impact Articles and blogs in the Seychelles conservation Magazine
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013,2014,2015,2016
 
Description Telomere lengths predict life expectancy in the wild 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact A press release that got massive attention, resulting in numerous articles in newspapers (e.g. two page spread in the Independent), online, radio interviews across the world and a local TV interview on BBC news

A large amount of media interest from around the world
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2012