Early-life glucocorticoids accelerate lymphocyte count senescence in roe deer

•Immunosenescence is the decline of immune functions with age, and its ecological and physiological drivers remain unclear.•Glucocorticoids, especially when elevated in early life, may modulate immunosenescence patterns.•We tested if elevated juvenile glucocorticoids led to stronger immunosenescence...

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Veröffentlicht in:General and comparative endocrinology 2024-10, Vol.357, p.114595, Article 114595
Hauptverfasser: Lalande, Lucas D., Bourgoin, Gilles, Carbillet, Jeffrey, Cheynel, Louise, Debias, François, Ferté, Hubert, Gaillard, Jean-Michel, Garcia, Rebecca, Lemaître, Jean-François, Palme, Rupert, Pellerin, Maryline, Peroz, Carole, Rey, Benjamin, Vuarin, Pauline, Gilot-Fromont, Emmanuelle
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container_title General and comparative endocrinology
container_volume 357
creator Lalande, Lucas D.
Bourgoin, Gilles
Carbillet, Jeffrey
Cheynel, Louise
Debias, François
Ferté, Hubert
Gaillard, Jean-Michel
Garcia, Rebecca
Lemaître, Jean-François
Palme, Rupert
Pellerin, Maryline
Peroz, Carole
Rey, Benjamin
Vuarin, Pauline
Gilot-Fromont, Emmanuelle
description •Immunosenescence is the decline of immune functions with age, and its ecological and physiological drivers remain unclear.•Glucocorticoids, especially when elevated in early life, may modulate immunosenescence patterns.•We tested if elevated juvenile glucocorticoids led to stronger immunosenescence and parasitism in wild roe deer.•Juvenile glucocorticoids accelerated lymphocyte senescence and suggests a role of glucocorticoids on thymic characteristics.•High juvenile glucocorticoids in poor natal environments correlated with more adult lung parasites. Immunosenescence corresponds to the progressive decline of immune functions with increasing age. Although it is critical to understand what modulates such a decline, the ecological and physiological drivers of immunosenescence remain poorly understood in the wild. Among them, the level of glucocorticoids (GCs) during early life are good candidates to modulate immunosenescence patterns because these hormones can have long-term consequences on individual physiology. Indeed, GCs act as regulators of energy allocation to ensure allostasis, are part of the stress response triggered by unpredictable events and have immunosuppressive effects when chronically elevated. We used longitudinal data collected over two decades in two populations of roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) to test whether higher baseline GC levels measured within the first year of life were associated with a more pronounced immunosenescence and parasite susceptibility. We first assessed immunosenescence trajectories in these populations facing contrasting environmental conditions. Then, we found that juvenile GC levels can modulate lymphocyte trajectory. Lymphocyte depletion was accelerated late in life when GCs were elevated early in life. Although the exact mechanism remains to be elucidated, it could involve a role of GCs on thymic characteristics. In addition, elevated GC levels in juveniles were associated with a higher abundance of lung parasites during adulthood for individuals born during bad years, suggesting short-term negative effects of GCs on juvenile immunity, having in turn long-lasting consequences on adult parasite load, depending on juvenile environmental conditions. These findings offer promising research directions in assessing the carry-over consequences of GCs on life-history traits in the wild.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ygcen.2024.114595
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Immunosenescence corresponds to the progressive decline of immune functions with increasing age. Although it is critical to understand what modulates such a decline, the ecological and physiological drivers of immunosenescence remain poorly understood in the wild. Among them, the level of glucocorticoids (GCs) during early life are good candidates to modulate immunosenescence patterns because these hormones can have long-term consequences on individual physiology. Indeed, GCs act as regulators of energy allocation to ensure allostasis, are part of the stress response triggered by unpredictable events and have immunosuppressive effects when chronically elevated. We used longitudinal data collected over two decades in two populations of roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) to test whether higher baseline GC levels measured within the first year of life were associated with a more pronounced immunosenescence and parasite susceptibility. We first assessed immunosenescence trajectories in these populations facing contrasting environmental conditions. Then, we found that juvenile GC levels can modulate lymphocyte trajectory. Lymphocyte depletion was accelerated late in life when GCs were elevated early in life. Although the exact mechanism remains to be elucidated, it could involve a role of GCs on thymic characteristics. In addition, elevated GC levels in juveniles were associated with a higher abundance of lung parasites during adulthood for individuals born during bad years, suggesting short-term negative effects of GCs on juvenile immunity, having in turn long-lasting consequences on adult parasite load, depending on juvenile environmental conditions. 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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Aging
Allostatic load
Ecology, environment
Faecal glucocorticoid metabolites
Immunity
Life Sciences
Parasite
Stress
title Early-life glucocorticoids accelerate lymphocyte count senescence in roe deer
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