Hammers Martijn, Kingma Sjouke A, Bebbington Kat, van de Crommenacker Janske, Spurgin Lewis G, Richardson David S, Burke Terry, Dugdale Hannah L, Komdeur Jan
Behavioural & Physiological Ecology, GELIFES, University of Groningen, P.O. Box 11103, 9700 CC, Groningen, The Netherlands.
Behavioural & Physiological Ecology, GELIFES, University of Groningen, P.O. Box 11103, 9700 CC, Groningen, The Netherlands.
Exp Gerontol. 2015 Nov;71:69-79. doi: 10.1016/j.exger.2015.08.019. Epub 2015 Sep 4.
Senescence--the progressive age-dependent decline in performance--occurs in most organisms. There is considerable variation in the onset and rate of senescence between and within species. Yet the causes of this variation are still poorly understood, despite being central to understanding the evolution of senescence. Long-term longitudinal studies on wild animals are extremely well-suited to studying the impact of environmental and individual characteristics (and the interaction between the two) on senescence, and can help us to understand the mechanisms that shape the evolution of senescence. In this review, we summarize and discuss the insights gained from our comprehensive long-term individual-based study of the Seychelles warbler (Acrocephalus sechellensis). This species provides an excellent model system in which to investigate the evolution of senescence in the wild. We found that Seychelles warblers show senescent declines in survival and reproduction, and discuss how individual characteristics (body condition, body size) and environmental effects (low- versus high-quality environments) may affect the onset and rate of senescence. Further, we highlight the evidence for trade-offs between early-life investment and senescence. We describe how key cellular and physiological processes (oxidative stress and telomere shortening) underpinning senescence are affected by individual and environmental characteristics in the Seychelles warbler (e.g. food availability, reproductive investment, disease) and we discuss how such physiological variation may mediate the relationship between environmental characteristics and senescence. Based on our work using Seychelles warblers as a model system, we show how insights from long-term studies of wild animals may help unravel the causes of the remarkable variation in senescence observed in natural systems, and highlight areas for promising future research.
衰老——机能随年龄增长而逐渐衰退——在大多数生物体中都会发生。物种之间以及物种内部,衰老的起始和速度存在相当大的差异。然而,尽管这对于理解衰老的进化至关重要,但这种差异的成因仍知之甚少。对野生动物的长期纵向研究非常适合用于研究环境和个体特征(以及两者之间的相互作用)对衰老的影响,并有助于我们理解塑造衰老进化的机制。在这篇综述中,我们总结并讨论了从对塞舌尔莺(Acrocephalus sechellensis)进行的全面长期个体研究中获得的见解。该物种为研究野生环境中衰老的进化提供了一个极佳的模型系统。我们发现塞舌尔莺在生存和繁殖方面出现了衰老性衰退,并讨论了个体特征(身体状况、体型)和环境影响(低质量与高质量环境)如何可能影响衰老的起始和速度。此外,我们强调了早期生命投资与衰老之间权衡的证据。我们描述了衰老所基于的关键细胞和生理过程(氧化应激和端粒缩短)如何受到塞舌尔莺个体和环境特征(如食物供应、繁殖投资、疾病)的影响,并且我们讨论了这种生理变异如何可能调节环境特征与衰老之间的关系。基于我们以塞舌尔莺为模型系统的研究工作,我们展示了对野生动物的长期研究所得出的见解如何可能有助于揭示在自然系统中观察到的衰老显著差异的成因,并突出了未来有前景的研究领域。