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Larval diapause slows adult epigenetic ageing in an insect model, Nasonia vitripennis

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Version 2 2025-07-30, 10:51
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journal contribution
posted on 2025-07-30, 10:51 authored by Erin E.B. Foley, Christian ThomasChristian Thomas, Charalambos KyriacouCharalambos Kyriacou, Eamonn MallonEamonn Mallon
<p dir="ltr">Epigenetic clocks based on DNA methylation provide robust biomarkers of biological age, yet the mechanistic basis and functional significance of slowing these clocks remain unclear. Progress has been limited by the lack of short-lived, genetically tractable model organisms with functional DNA methylation systems. The jewel wasp, Nasonia vitripennis, offers a unique solution. It combines a functional DNA methylation system with a short lifespan and established tools for experimental manipulation. We previously developed an epigenetic clock in Nasonia, but whether this clock reflects plastic, environmentally driven aging processes was unknown. Here, we test this directly by experimentally inducing larval diapause, a naturally occurring developmental arrest triggered by environmental cues. Diapause extended median adult lifespan by 36% and significantly slowed the rate of epigenetic aging. Using whole-genome bisulfite sequencing across multiple adult timepoints, we show that while adults that have passed through diapause as larvae initially emerge epigenetically older, their subsequent epigenetic aging proceeds 29% more slowly than adults that have not passed through diapause as larvae. Clock CpGs were enriched for gene ontology terms related to conserved nutrient-sensing and developmental pathways, including insulin/IGF signaling and mTOR, supporting the established mechanistic link between development and epigenetic aging. These findings demonstrate that epigenetic aging is plastic in Nasonia and can be experimentally modulated by early-life environment, establishing this animal model as a tractable system for dissecting the causal mechanisms of epigenetic aging.</p><p><br></p>

Funding

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Midlands Integrative Biosciences Training Partnership Doctoral training partnership studentship

Leverhulme Trust grant (RPG-2020-363)

BBSRC Pathfinder IAA University of Leicester

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

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BBSRC Pioneer Award (APP3335)

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Genetics, Genome Biology & Cancer Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

PNAS

Volume

122

Issue

31

Pagination

e2513020122

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-07-30

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Eamonn Mallon

Deposit date

2025-07-07

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