The effect of experimental lead pollution on DNA methylation in a wild bird population




Mäkinen Hannu, van Oers Kees, Eeva Tapio, Ruuskanen Suvi

PublisherTAYLOR & FRANCIS INC

2022

Epigenetics

EPIGENETICS

EPIGENETICS-US

17

6

625

641

17

1559-2294

1559-2308

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/15592294.2021.1943863

https://doi.org/10.1080/15592294.2021.1943863

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/66922984



Anthropogenic pollution is known to negatively influence an organism's physiology, behaviour, and fitness. Epigenetic regulation, such as DNA methylation, has been hypothesized as a potential mechanism to mediate such effects, yet studies in wild species are lacking. We first investigated the effects of early-life exposure to the heavy metal lead (Pb) on DNA methylation levels in a wild population of great tits (Parus major), by experimentally exposing nestlings to Pb at environmentally relevant levels. Secondly, we compared nestling DNA methylation from a population exposed to long-term heavy metal pollution (close to a copper smelter), where birds suffer from pollution-related decrease in food quality, and a control population. For both comparisons, the analysis of about one million CpGs covering most of the annotated genes revealed that pollution-related changes in DNA methylation were not genome wide, but enriched for genes underlying developmental processes. However, the results were not consistent when using binomial or beta binomial regression highlighting the difficulty of modelling variance in CpGs. Our study indicates that post-natal anthropogenic heavy metal exposure can affect methylation levels of development related genes in a wild bird population.

Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 16:32