Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, Saint Paul, MN 55108, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2023 Oct 11;290(2008):20231616. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2023.1616.
Life-history theory predicts that increased investment in traits related to reproduction will be associated with a reduced ability to invest in survival or longevity. One mechanistic explanation for this trade-off is that metabolic stress generated from current fitness activities (e.g. reproduction or locomotion) will increase somatic damage, leading to reduced longevity. Yet, there has been limited support for this damage-based hypothesis. A possible explanation is that individuals can respond to increases in metabolic stress by plastically inducing cellular maintenance responses, which may increase, rather than decrease, longevity. We tested this possibility by experimentally manipulating investment in flight activity (a metabolic stressor) in the migratory monarch butterfly (), a species whose reproductive fitness is dependent on survival through a period of metabolically intensive migratory flight. Consistent with the idea that metabolic stress stimulated investment in self-maintenance, increased flight activity enhanced monarch butterfly longevity and somatic tissue antioxidant capacity, likely at a cost to reproductive investment. Our study implicates a role for metabolic stress as a driver of life-history plasticity and supports a model where current engagement in metabolically stressful activities promotes somatic survival by stimulating investment in self-maintenance processes.
生活史理论预测,与繁殖相关的特征的投资增加将与生存或长寿的投资减少相关。这种权衡的一种机械解释是,当前适应活动(例如繁殖或运动)产生的代谢应激会增加体细胞损伤,导致寿命缩短。然而,对这种基于损伤的假说的支持有限。一种可能的解释是,个体可以通过可塑性诱导细胞维持反应来应对代谢应激的增加,这可能会增加而不是减少寿命。我们通过实验操纵迁徙黑脉金斑蝶(一种代谢应激源)的飞行活动投资来检验这种可能性,迁徙黑脉金斑蝶的生殖适应性取决于在代谢旺盛的迁徙飞行期间的生存。与代谢应激刺激自我维持投资的观点一致,增加的飞行活动增强了黑脉金斑蝶的寿命和体细胞抗氧化能力,可能是以生殖投资为代价的。我们的研究表明代谢应激作为生活史可塑性的驱动因素的作用,并支持这样一种模型,即当前参与代谢应激活动通过刺激自我维持过程的投资来促进体细胞存活。