Literature DB >> 21849320

For better or worse: reduced adult lifespan following early-life stress is transmitted to breeding partners.

Pat Monaghan1, Britt J Heidinger, Liliana D'Alba, Neil P Evans, Karen A Spencer.   

Abstract

Stressful conditions early in life can give rise to exaggerated stress responses, which, while beneficial in the short term, chronically increase lifetime exposure to stress hormones and elevate disease risk later in life. Using zebra finches Taeniopygia guttata, we show here that individuals whose glucocorticoid stress hormones were experimentally increased for only a brief period in early post-natal life, inducing increased stress sensitivity, had reduced adult lifespans. Remarkably, the breeding partners of such exposed individuals also died at a younger age. This negative effect on partner longevity was the same for both sexes; it occurred irrespective of the partner's own early stress exposure and was in addition to any longevity reduction arising from this. Furthermore, this partner effect continued even after the breeding partnership was terminated. Only 5 per cent of control birds with control partners had died after 3 years, compared with over 40 per cent in early stress-early stress pairs. In contrast, reproductive capability appeared unaffected by the early stress treatment, even when breeding in stressful environmental circumstances. Our results clearly show that increased exposure to glucocorticoids early in life can markedly reduce adult life expectancy, and that pairing with such exposed partners carries an additional and substantial lifespan penalty.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21849320      PMCID: PMC3248736          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2011.1291

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  26 in total

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Review 5.  Minireview: transgenerational inheritance of the stress response: a new frontier in stress research.

Authors:  Stephen G Matthews; David I W Phillips
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  21 in total

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4.  Developmental stress increases reproductive success in male zebra finches.

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5.  Family-transmitted stress in a wild bird.

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10.  Developmental programming: cumulative effects of increased pre-hatching corticosterone levels and post-hatching unpredictable food availability on physiology and behaviour in adulthood.

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