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Maternal effects in the model system Daphnia: the ecological past meets the epigenetic future
Maternal effects have been shown to play influential roles in many evolutionary and ecological processes. However, understanding how environmental stimuli induce within-generation responses that transverse across generations remains elusive, particularly when attempting to segregate confounding effects from offspring genotypes. This review synthesizes literature regarding resource- and predation-driven maternal effects in the model system Daphnia, detailing how the maternal generation responds to the environmental stimuli and the maternal effects seen in the offspring generation(s). Our goal is to demonstrate the value of Daphnia as a model system by showing how general principles of maternal effects emerge from studies on this system. By integrating the results across different types of biotic drivers of maternal effects, we identified broadly applicable shared characteristics: 1. Many, but not all, maternal effects involve offspring size, influencing resistance to starvation, infection, predation, and toxins. 2. Maternal effects manifest more strongly when the offspring’s environment is poor. 3. Strong within-generation responses are typically associated with strong across-generation responses. 4. The timing of the maternal stress matters and can raise or lower the magnitude of the effect on the offspring’s phenotype. 5. Embryonic exposure effects could be mistaken for maternal effects. We outline questions to prioritize for future research and discuss the possibilities for integration of ecologically relevant studies of maternal effects in natural populations with the molecular mechanisms that make them possible, specifically by addressing genetic variation and incorporating information on epigenetics. These small crustaceans can unravel how and why non-genetic information gets passed to future generations.
Transgenerational inheritance of diabetes susceptibility in male offspring with maternal androgen exposure
Androgen exposure (AE) poses a profound health threat to women, yet its transgenerational impacts on male descendants remain unclear. Here, employing a large-scale mother-child cohort, we show that maternal hyperandrogenism predisposes sons to β-cell dysfunction. Male offspring mice with prenatal AE exhibited hyperglycemia and glucose intolerance across three generations, which were further exacerbated by aging and a high-fat diet. Mechanistically, compromised insulin secretion underlies this transgenerational susceptibility to diabetes. Integrated analyses of methylome and transcriptome revealed differential DNA methylation of β-cell functional genes in AE-F1 sperm, which was transmitted to AE-F2 islets and further retained in AE-F2 sperm, leading to reduced expression of genes related to insulin secretion, including Pdx1, Irs1, Ptprn2, and Cacna1c. The methylation signatures in AE-F1 sperm were corroborated in diabetic humans and the blood of sons with maternal hyperandrogenism. Moreover, caloric restriction and metformin treatments normalized hyperglycemia in AE-F1 males and blocked their inheritance to offspring by restoring the aberrant sperm DNA methylations. Our findings highlight the transgenerational inheritance of impaired glucose homeostasis in male offspring from maternal AE via DNA methylation changes, providing methylation biomarkers and therapeutic strategies to safeguard future generations’ metabolic health.
Developmental air pollution exposure augments airway hyperreactivity, alters transcriptome, and DNA methylation in female adult progeny
Maternal exposure to particulate air pollution increases the incidence and severity of asthma in offspring, yet the mechanisms for this are unclear. Known susceptibility loci are a minor component of this effect. We interrogate a mouse allergic airway disease model to assess epigenetic associations between maternal air pollution exposure and asthma responses in offspring. Maternal air pollution exposure increased allergic airway disease severity in adult offspring associated with a suppressed transcriptomic response. Control progeny showed differential expression of 2842 genes across several important pathways, whilst air pollutant progeny showed an 80% reduction in differentially expressed genes and abrogation of many pathway associations. Whole genome CpG methylome analysis following allergen challenge detected differential methylation regions across the genome. Differentially methylated regions were markedly reduced in air pollutant offspring, and this was most evident in intronic regions and some transposable element classes. This study shows that asthma in adult offspring of PM2.5 exposed mothers had a markedly repressed transcriptomic response, a proportion of which was associated with identifiable changes in the lung’s methylome. The results point to an epigenetic contribution to the severity of asthma in offspring of mothers exposed to particulate air pollution.
A torpor-like state in mice slows blood epigenetic aging and prolongs healthspan
Torpor and hibernation are extreme physiological adaptations of homeotherms associated with pro-longevity effects. Yet the underlying mechanisms of how torpor affects aging, and whether hypothermic and hypometabolic states can be induced to slow aging and increase healthspan, remain unknown. Here we demonstrate that the activity of a spatially defined neuronal population in the preoptic area, which has previously been identified as a torpor-regulating brain region, is sufficient to induce a torpor-like state (TLS) in mice. Prolonged induction of TLS slows epigenetic aging across multiple tissues and improves healthspan. We isolate the effects of decreased metabolic rate, long-term caloric restriction, and decreased core body temperature (Tb) on blood epigenetic aging and find that the decelerating effect of TLSs on aging is mediated by decreased Tb. Taken together, our findings provide novel mechanistic insight into the decelerating effects of torpor and hibernation on aging and support the growing body of evidence that Tb is an important mediator of the aging processes.
Cannabinoid-2 receptor depletion promotes non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in mice via disturbing gut microbiota and tryptophan metabolism
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the hepatic manifestation of the metabolic syndrome. NAFLD encompasses a spectrum of liver damage starting with liver steatosis and lipid disorders presented as the hallmark. Cannabinoid-2 receptor (CB2R) is the receptor of endocannabinoids mainly expressed in immune cells. Our preliminary study revealed the preventative role of CB2R in liver injury related to lipid metabolism. In this study, we aimed to explore the role of CB2R in NAFLD and the underlying mechanism related to microbial community. High-fat diet-induced NAFLD model was established in mice. We found that hepatic CB2R expression was significantly reduced in NAFLD mice and CB2R–/– mice fed with normal chow. Interestingly, cohousing with or transplanted with microbiota from WT mice, or treatment with an antibiotic cocktail ameliorated the NAFLD phenotype of CB2R–/– mice. The gut dysbiosis in CB2R–/– mice including increased Actinobacteriota and decreased Bacteroidota was similar to that of NAFLD patients and NAFLD mice. Microbial functional analysis and metabolomics profiling revealed obviously disturbed tryptophan metabolism in NAFLD patients and NAFLD mice, which were also seen in CB2R–/– mice. Correlation network showed that the disordered tryptophan metabolites such as indolelactic acid (ILA) and xanthurenic acid in CB2R-/- mice were mediated by gut dysbiosis and related to NAFLD severity indicators. In vitro and in vivo validation experiments showed that the enriched tryptophan metabolites ILA aggravated NAFLD phenotypes. These results demonstrate the involvement of CB2R in NAFLD, which is related to gut microbiota-mediated tryptophan metabolites. Our findings highlight CB2R and the associated microbes and tryptophan metabolites as promising targets for the treatment of NAFLD.
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