| Literature DB >> 26752635 |
Joost van den Heuvel1,2, Sinead English3,4, Tobias Uller3,5.
Abstract
Maternal effects are ubiquitous in nature and affect a wide range of offspring phenotypes. Recent research suggests that maternal effects also contribute to ageing, but the theoretical basis for these observations is poorly understood. Here we develop a simple model to derive expectations for (i) if maternal effects on ageing evolve; (ii) the strength of maternal effects on ageing relative to direct environmental effects; and (iii) the predicted relationships between environmental quality, maternal age and offspring lifespan. Our model is based on the disposable soma theory of ageing, and the key assumption is thus that mothers trade off their own somatic maintenance against investment in offspring. This trade-off affects the biological age of offspring at birth in terms of accumulated damage, as indicated by biomarkers such as oxidative stress or telomere length. We find that the optimal allocation between investment in maternal somatic investment and investment in offspring results in old mothers and mothers with low resource availability producing offspring with reduced life span. Furthermore, the effects are interactive, such that the strongest maternal age effects on offspring lifespan are found under low resource availability. These findings are broadly consistent with results from laboratory studies investigating the onset and rate of ageing and field studies examining maternal effects on ageing in the wild.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26752635 PMCID: PMC4709080 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Overview of parameters and variables with their respective numeric values.
| Parameters | Description | Value(s) |
|---|---|---|
| SDEV | Chronological age at maturity | 19 |
| κ | Maximum increase of biological age | 1000 |
| ω | Maintenance efficiency | -4 |
| β | Half-saturation value for maintenance | 10 |
| μb | Basal mortality | 0.005 |
| μd | Biological age dependent mortality | 0.005 |
| States | ||
| S | Development time | 0–20 |
| D | Biological age | 0–1999 |
| E | Resource acquisition value | 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, 0.9 |
| Other variables | ||
| U | Resource allocated to maintenance | 0–0.9 |
| R | Resource allocated to reproduction | 0–0.9 |
| D0 | Biological age at birth | 0–1000 |
| M | Mortality per time step | 0 –∞ |
| Q | Strategic value of allocation to maintenance or reproduction | 0–1 |
a acquisition takes five discrete values in the current model, but this can be adjusted based on user preferences
b although theoretically biological age is unlimited in practice it is limited in this model by 1999 (see Eq 4).
Fig 1Optimal allocation strategies of mothers depending on their current nutrition and biological age.
(A) Proportion of acquired resources allocated to offspring as a function of the resource environment and biological age of the mother. (B) As a consequence of the pattern in panel A, the resource environment availability and biological age of the mother affects the biological age of offspring at birth. Results are shown for five different levels of maternal resource environment (E) which are indicated by lines of different colours (see text for model details).
Fig 2Survival curves of offspring in four simulated scenarios.
The x-axes represent age in time steps during the forward simulation. (A) Survival of offspring born from middle age mothers (D = 1200) in patches of different resource levels (lines of different colours represent different values for maternal resource [E]) under the variable environment, i.e., when offspring experience unpredictable variation in resources throughout life, which is similar to the evolutionary background condition. (B) Survival of offspring born from mothers of different biological age (lines of different colours represent different values for maternal biological age [D]) in a high quality environment (E = 0.9) under variable environmental conditions, which is similar to the evolutionary background condition. (as in panel A). (C) Survival of offspring born from middle-age mothers (D = 1200) from different resource environments (lines of different colours represent different values for maternal resource [E]). Offspring encountering a single resource environment throughout life are grouped together, which results in five groups of survival curves from left to right (offspring experienced one of five patch types constantly through the rest of development, and the survival curves are therefore clustered into five distinct groups), each with the maternal resource availability indicated in colour (from low to high, i.e., E = 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, 0.7 and 0.9). (D) Survival of offspring born from mothers of different biological age (lines of different colours represent different values for maternal biological age [D]) in a high quality environment. Offspring encountering a single resource environment throughout life are grouped together, which results in five groups of survival curves from left to right (offspring experienced one of five patch types constantly through the rest of development, and the survival curves are therefore clustered into five distinct groups), each with the maternal age indicated in colour (from young to old, i.e., D = 0, 400, 800, 1200, 1600).