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Oxidative Stress Experienced during Early Development Influences the Offspring Phenotype

Ana Á. Romero‐Haro, Carlos Alonso‐Álvarez

2020The American Naturalist28 citationsDOI

Abstract

) during their development by transitorily inhibiting the synthesis of the key antioxidant glutathione ("early-high-OS"). The offspring of these birds and control parents were cross fostered at hatching to enlarge or reduce its brood size. Independent of parents' early-life OS levels, the chicks raised in enlarged broods showed lower erythrocyte glutathione levels, revealing glutathione sensitivity to environmental conditions. Control biological mothers produced females, not males, that attained a higher body mass when raised in a benign environment (i.e., the reduced brood). In contrast, biological mothers exposed to early-life OS produced heavier males, not females, when allocated in reduced broods. Early-life OS also affected the parental rearing capacity because 12-day-old nestlings raised by a foster pair with both early-high-OS members grew shorter legs (tarsus) than chicks from other groups. The results indicate that environmental conditions during development can affect early glutathione levels, which may in turn influence the next generation through both pre- and postnatal parental effects. The results also demonstrate that early-life OS can constrain the offspring phenotype.

Topics & Concepts

OffspringOxidative stressPhenotypeBiologyGeneticsEndocrinologyGenePregnancyBirth, Development, and HealthAldose Reductase and TaurineAdipose Tissue and Metabolism