| Literature DB >> 35939680 |
Andréaz Dupoué1, Pauline Blaimont2,3, Frédéric Angelier4, Cécile Ribout4, David Rozen-Rechels5, Murielle Richard6, Donald Miles7, Pierre de Villemereuil8, Alexis Rutschmann9, Arnaud Badiane5, Fabien Aubret6,10, Olivier Lourdais4, Sandrine Meylan5, Julien Cote11, Jean Clobert6, Jean-François Le Galliard5,12.
Abstract
Aging is the price to pay for acquiring and processing energy through cellular activity and life history productivity. Climate warming can exacerbate the inherent pace of aging, as illustrated by a faster erosion of protective telomere DNA sequences. This biomarker integrates individual pace of life and parental effects through the germline, but whether intra- and intergenerational telomere dynamics underlies population trends remains an open question. Here, we investigated the covariation between life history, telomere length (TL), and extinction risk among three age classes in a cold-adapted ectotherm (Zootoca vivipara) facing warming-induced extirpations in its distribution limits. TL followed the same threshold relationships with population extinction risk at birth, maturity, and adulthood, suggesting intergenerational accumulation of accelerated aging rate in declining populations. In dwindling populations, most neonates inherited already short telomeres, suggesting they were born physiologically old and unlikely to reach recruitment. At adulthood, TL further explained females' reproductive performance, switching from an index of individual quality in stable populations to a biomarker of reproductive costs in those close to extirpation. We compiled these results to propose the aging loop hypothesis and conceptualize how climate-driven telomere shortening in ectotherms may accumulate across generations and generate tipping points before local extirpation.Entities:
Keywords: aging; ectotherms; life-history tradeoffs; population extinction; telomeres
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35939680 PMCID: PMC9388115 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2201371119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779