Abstract

Developmental conditions can impact the adult phenotype via epigenetic changes that modulate gene expression. In mammals, methylation of the glucocorticoid receptor gene Nr3c1 has been implicated as mediator of long-term effects of developmental conditions, but this evidence is limited to humans and rodents, and few studies have simultaneously tested for associations between DNA methylation, gene expression and phenotype. Adverse environmental conditions during early life (large natal brood size) or adulthood (high foraging costs) exert multiple long-term phenotypic effects in zebra finches, and we here test for effects of these manipulations on DNA methylation and expression of the Nr3c1 gene in blood. Having been reared in a large brood induced higher DNA methylation of the Nr3c1 regulatory region in adulthood, and this effect persisted over years. Nr3c1 expression was negatively correlated with methylation at 2 out of 8 CpG sites, and was lower in hard foraging conditions, despite foraging conditions having no effect on Nr3c1 methylation at our target region. Nr3c1 expression also correlated with glucocorticoid traits: higher expression level was associated with lower plasma baseline corticosterone concentrations and enhanced corticosterone reactivity. Our results suggest that methylation of the Nr3c1 regulatory region can contribute to the mechanisms underlying the emergence of long-term effects of developmental conditions in birds, but in our system current adversity dominated over early life experiences with respect to receptor expression.

Highlights

  • Developmental conditions can impact the adult phenotype via epigenetic changes that modulate gene expression

  • The glucocorticoid receptor gene (Nr3c1) in particular has been shown to be sensitive to early-life environmental conditions, and this effect has been attributed to epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation[4,16,17,18,19]

  • We tested whether developmental adversity is associated with DNA methylation and expression levels of the GR gene (Nr3c1) in zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata), and how expression levels are related to corticosterone levels in the same individuals

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Summary

Introduction

Developmental conditions can impact the adult phenotype via epigenetic changes that modulate gene expression. Methylation of the glucocorticoid receptor gene Nr3c1 has been implicated as mediator of long-term effects of developmental conditions, but this evidence is limited to humans and rodents, and few studies have simultaneously tested for associations between DNA methylation, gene expression and phenotype. Our results suggest that methylation of the Nr3c1 regulatory region can contribute to the mechanisms underlying the emergence of long-term effects of developmental conditions in birds, but in our system current adversity dominated over early life experiences with respect to receptor expression. We predicted that harsh developmental conditions (large broods) would induce higher methylation in the regulatory region of the Nr3c1 gene, with knock-on effects on gene expression of the GR and HPA axis reactivity (i.e. corticosterone levels and dynamics). We further tested whether such effects are dependent on the adult environment (high vs. low foraging costs), as we have previously shown long-term effects of developmental conditions on adult phenotype to depend on the adult foraging environment[3,29,30] (Table S1)

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