The impact of parental and developmental stress on DNA methylation in
the avian hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
Abstract
The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis coordinates an organism’s
response to environmental stress. The responsiveness and sensitivity of
an offspring’s stress response may be shaped not only by stressors
encountered in an organism’s early post-natal environment, but also by
stressors in their parent’s environment. Yet, few studies have
considered how stressors encountered in both of these early life
environments may function together to impact the developing HPA axis.
Here, we manipulated stressors in the parental and post-natal
environments in a population of house sparrows (Passer domesticus) to
assess the impact of these stressors on changes in DNA methylation in a
suite of genes within the HPA axis. We found that nestlings that
experienced early life stress across both life-history periods had
higher DNA methylation in a critical HPA axis gene, the glucocorticoid
receptor (NR3C1). In addition, we found that the life-history stage when
stress was encountered impacted some genes (HSD11B1, NR3C1, and NR3C2)
differently. We also found evidence for the mitigation of parental
stress by post-natal stress (in HSD11B1 and NR3C2). Finally, by
assessing DNA methylation in both the brain and the blood, we were able
to evaluate cross-tissue patterns; while some differentially methylated
regions were tissue-specific, we found cross-tissue changes in NR3C2 and
NR3C1, suggesting that blood may be a potential biomarker for DNA
methylation of specific genes. Our results provide a crucial first step
in understanding the mechanisms by which early life stress in different
life history periods contributes to changes in the epigenome of the HPA
axis.