| Literature DB >> 26645576 |
Abstract
Progress in improving animal welfare is currently limited by the lack of objective methods for assessing lifetime experience. I propose that telomere attrition, a cellular biomarker of biological age, provides a molecular measure of cumulative experience that could be used to assess the welfare impact of husbandry regimes and/or experimental procedures on non-human animals. I review evidence from humans that telomere attrition is accelerated by negative experiences in a cumulative and dose-dependent manner, but that this attrition can be mitigated or even reversed by positive life-style interventions. Evidence from non-human animals suggests that despite some specific differences in telomere biology, stress-induced telomere attrition is a robust phenomenon, occurring in a range of species including mice and chickens. I conclude that telomere attrition apparently integrates positive and negative experience in an accessible common currency that translates readily to novel species--the Holy Grail of a cumulative welfare indicator.Entities:
Keywords: animal welfare; biological age; biomarker; cumulative experience; cumulative severity; stress; telomere dynamics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26645576 PMCID: PMC4737400 DOI: 10.1002/bies.201500127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioessays ISSN: 0265-9247 Impact factor: 4.345
Examples of evidence from humans that the classes of stressors assumed to contribute to poor animal welfare are associated with physiological changes known to accelerate TA in vitro
| Class of negative experience | Specific example | Physiological changes linked to TA | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Physical injury | Acute spinal cord injury | Inflammation ↑ |
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| Infection | Bacterial pathogens | Inflammation ↑ |
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| Exposure to environmental toxins | Tobacco smoke | Inflammation and OS ↑ |
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| Cortisol ↑ |
| ||
| Pain | Fibromyalgia | Inflammation ↑ |
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| Assorted types of chronic pain | Cortisol ↑ |
| |
| Disturbed sleep | Shift work | Cortisol ↑ |
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| Psychosocial stressors | Serious life events (death of a relative, divorce, etc.) | Cortisol ↑ |
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| Mood disorders | Anxiety disorders | Cortisol ↑ |
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| Inflammation ↑ |
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| Major depression | Inflammation and OS ↑ |
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| Cortisol ↑ |
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Figure 1Summary of the some of the known relationships between organism‐level experiences, the cellular environment and telomere dynamics in humans. In general, it appears that negative experiences shorten telomeres, whereas positive experiences can retard, prevent or possibly reverse telomere attrition. References for the associations shown in this figure are given in Table 1 and Section 3 of the text.
Comparative telomere biology in selected farm, laboratory and companion animals
| Taxonomic group | Species | Nucleated erythrocytes | TL (kb) | Telomerase | Age‐related TA | Key references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primates | Human ( | No | 8–20 | No | Yes (long) | See main text |
| Macaque monkeys ( | No | 15–18 | No | Yes (cross) |
| |
| Rodents | Mouse ( | No | 25–200 (laboratory) | Yes |
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| 12–25 (wild derived) | ||||||
| Lagomorphs | Rabbit ( | No | 20–50 | No |
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| Carnivores | Domestic dog ( | No | 10–23 | No | Yes (cross) |
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| Domestic cat ( | No | 5–26 | No | Yes (cross) |
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| Cetartiodactyles | Cow ( | No | 18 | No | Yes (cross) |
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| Sheep ( | No | 9–23 | No | Yes (cross) |
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| Pig ( | No | 10–30 | Unclear | Yes (cross) |
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| Perissodactyles | Horse ( | No | 14 | No | Yes (cross) |
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| Donkey ( | No | 7–21 | No | Yes (cross) |
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| Birds | Parrot ( | Yes | Yes (cross) |
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| Chicken ( | Yes | 0.5–4000 | No | Yes (cross) |
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| Zebra finch ( | Yes | 8–30 | No | Yes (long) |
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| European starling ( | Yes | Yes (long) |
| |||
| Teleost fish | Salmon/trout ( | Yes | 20 | Yes | No (long) |
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| Zebra fish ( | Yes | 2–10 | Yes |
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Blank cells indicate that I have not been able to find any relevant data.
I have selected a few species judged to be of particular welfare concern for this table. Data on many more species including some common zoo animals are available in the following reviews: 15, 52, 53, 103.
TL estimates come from a variety of methods and the ranges reported span values given in the papers reviewed.
This column records whether telomerase is expressed in adult somatic cells. For mammals (excluding cat and dog), data are taken from 15. For other species, data are taken from sources cited in the final column.
This column records whether age‐related TA has been documented from blood/tissue samples in vivo: ‘cross’ indicates a cross‐sectional study and ‘long’ a longitudinal study (the better method). Sources are cited in the final column.
This result is for wild‐type fish; age‐related TA was found in transgenic salmon with an artificially increased growth rate 99.
Examples of studies investigating effects of various types of stress on TA in selected laboratory, farm and companion animals
| Species | Age | Type of study | Tissue | Method | Number of subjects | Stress manipulation | Control | Effect of stress on TL | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wild house mouse ( | Juvenile females (1–6 months) | Expt | Leukocyte | QPCR | 8 trt | Rapid reproduction for 5 m (offspring removed) | Pair of females | ↓ |
|
| Long: 5 months | 20 con | ||||||||
| Wild house mouse ( | Juvenile females (1–6 months) | Expt | Leukocyte | QPCR | 9 trt | Crowding for 5 m (offspring not removed) | Pair of females | ↓ |
|
| Long: 5 months | 20 con | ||||||||
| Wild house mouse ( | Juvenile males (1–6 months) | Expt | Leukocyte | QPCR | 10 trt | Crowding for 5 m (offspring not removed) | Male–female pair (offspring removed) | ↓ |
|
| Long: 5 months | 8 con | ||||||||
| Wild house mouse ( | Adults (3–12 months) | Expt | Leukocyte | QPCR | 24 trt | 5× repeated infection with | 5× oral saline | ↓ In males |
|
| Long: 8 months | 24 con | ||||||||
| Laboratory mouse C57BL/6J ( | Adults (12 months) | Expt | Leucocyte (blood and saliva) | QPCR | 16 trt | 4× repeated cycle of tail suspension, forced swim, foot shock, restraint and sleep deprivation | No stress | ↓ |
|
| Long: 4 weeks | 16 con | ||||||||
| Laboratory mouse C57BL/6J ( | Adult females (12 months) | Expt | Leucocytes (blood and saliva) | QPCR | 8 trt | Daily injection of 30 mg/kg corticosterone | Daily injection of vehicle (oil) | ↓ |
|
| Long: 4 weeks | 8 con | ||||||||
| Sudanian grass rat ( | Juvenile males (2–3 months) | Expt | Hepatic cells | QPCR | 12 trt | Chronic ‘jet lag’ (bi‐weekly peturbations of LD cycle) for 30 days | 12:12 hours LD cycle for 30 d | ↓ |
|
| Cross | 12 con | ||||||||
| African grey parrot ( | Adults (0.75–45 years) | Obs | Erythrocyte | QPCR | 26 trt | Socially isolated | Pair‐housed | ↓ |
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| Cross | 19 con | ||||||||
| Domestic broiler chicken Ross 308 ( | Chicks (7 days) | Expt | Lymphocyte | FISH | 8 trt | High stocking density (0.06 m2/bird) for 28 days | Low stocking density (0.1 m2/bird) for 28 days | ↓ |
|
| Cross | 8 con | ||||||||
| Domestic chicken Single Comb White Leghorn ( | Adult females (62 weeks) | Expt | Lymphocyte | FISH | 12 trt | High stocking density (0.04 m2/bird) and restricted food for 14 days | Low stocking density (0.1 m2/bird) and ad lib. food for 14 days | ↓ |
|
| Cross/long: 14 days | 12 con | ||||||||
| European starling ( | Chicks (3 days) | Expt | Erythrocyte | QPCR | 11 trt | Cross‐fostered into broods of seven chicks | Cross‐fostered into broods of two chicks | ↓ |
|
| Long: 11 days | 12 con | ||||||||
| European starling ( | Chicks (2 days) | Expt | Erythrocyte | QPCR | 17 trt | Cross‐fostered to be 4.8 g lighter than competitor chicks in brood | Cross‐fostered to be 4.9 g heavier than competitor chicks | ↓ |
|
| Long: 9 days | 18 con | ||||||||
| Great reed warbler ( | Juvenile birds | Expt | Erythrocyte | QPCR | 12 trt | Acute and chronic infection with | No infection | ↓ |
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| Long: 9–10 weeks | 4 con | ||||||||
| Zebra finch ( | Chicks (1–3 days) | Expt | Erythrocyte | QPCR | 30 trt | Brood sizes enlarged by two chicks | No change in brood size | ↓ |
|
| Long: 20 days | 25 con | ||||||||
| Coho salmon ( | Adults (conception) | Expt | Pelic fin (blood and tissue) | QPCR | 23 trt | Transgenic fish with enhanced growth rate | Wild‐type | ↓ |
|
| Long: 10 months | 15 con |
Expt, experimental; Obs, observational/correlational; long, longitudinal; cross, cross‐sectional; QPCR, quantitative PCR; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridisation; trt, treatment; con, control; ↓ indicates shorter telomeres (cross‐sectional studies) or greater attrition (longitudinal studies) in stress manipulation group relative to control group.
For longitudinal studies, age is the age of the subjects at the start of the stress manipulation.
Durations given for longitudinal studies refer to the period between the first and second telomere measurements.
Figure 2Examples of proposed effects of age and stress on TL between two time points, t 1 and t 2. TA for the time period between t 1 and t 2 corresponds to the difference in TL between these two time points (indicated by the two‐ended arrows). Part A shows the change in telomere length over time for an animal that is not exposed to any stressful experiences (i.e. the age‐dependent component of my model). Part B shows the change in telomere length over time for the same animal exposed to three stressors (indicated by red bars) each of the same duration but of progressively decreasing amplitude (indicated by the height of the bars). This situation could pertain to an animal that is repeatedly subjected to the same stressful procedure, but that habituates to this procedure such that the amplitude of its stress response decreases with each exposure. Note that the rate of change in TL is greater during the periods of stress and is proportional to the amplitude of the stressors, but returns to the baseline rate of A at the end of each stressor. TAB is greater than TAA, reflecting the greater cumulative severity in B.