Sex-Specific Methylomic and Transcriptomic Responses of the Avian Pineal Gland to Unpredictable Illumination Patterns

IF 8.3 1区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Fábio Pértille, Tejaswi Badam, Nina Mitheiss, Pia Løtvedt, Emmanouil Tsakoumis, Mika Gustafsson, Luiz Lehmann Coutinho, Per Jensen, Carlos Guerrero-Bosagna
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Abstract

In the production environment of chickens, exposure to unpredictable light patterns is a common painless stressor, widely used to influence growth rate and egg production efficiency. The pineal gland, a key regulator of circadian rhythms through melatonin secretion, responds to environmental light cues, and its function is modulated by epigenetic mechanisms. In this study, we investigated how the pineal gland methylome and transcriptome (including micro-RNAs) interact to respond to a rearing exposure to unpredictable illumination patterns, with a particular focus on sex differences. We conducted an integrative multi-omic analysis—including methylomic (MeDIP-seq), transcriptomic (RNA-seq), and miRNA expression profiling—on the pineal gland of Hy-Line White chickens (n = 34, 18 females, 16 males) exposed to either a standard 12:12 light–dark cycle (control) or a randomized, unpredictable light schedule from Days 3 to 24 post-hatch. Our findings reveal that unpredictable light exposure alters the pineal gland methylome and transcriptome in a sex-specific manner. However, while transcriptomic differences between sexes increased due to the stress, methylomic differences decreased, particularly on the Z chromosome. These changes were driven by females (the heterogametic sex in birds), which became more male-like in their pineal methylome after exposure to the illumination stress, leading to reduced epigenetic sexual dimorphism while maintaining differences at the gene expression level. Further, we implemented a fixed sex effect model as a biological proof of concept, identifying a network of 12 key core genes interacting with 102 other genes, all linked to circadian regulation and stress adaptation. This network of genes comprises a core regulatory framework for circadian response. Additionally, tissue-specific expression analysis and cell-type specific expression analysis revealed enrichment in brain regions critical for circadian function, including neuronal populations involved in circadian regulation and the hypothalamic–pituitary–thyroid axis. Together, these findings provide strong evidence of sex-specific epigenetic transcriptomic responses of the pineal gland upon illumination stress and offer valuable insights into the interplay of different omic levels in relation to circadian response.

Abstract Image

鸟类松果体对不可预测光照模式的性别特异性甲基组和转录组反应
在鸡的生产环境中,暴露于不可预测的光照模式是一种常见的无痛应激源,广泛用于影响生长速度和产蛋效率。松果体通过褪黑激素分泌调节昼夜节律,对环境光信号作出反应,其功能受表观遗传机制调节。在这项研究中,我们研究了松果体甲基组和转录组(包括微rna)如何相互作用,以应对饲养暴露于不可预测的光照模式,特别关注性别差异。我们对孵化后第3天至第24天暴露在标准12:12光照-黑暗周期(对照)或随机、不可预测光照计划下的海兰白鸡(n = 34, 18只雌性,16只雄性)松果体进行了综合多组学分析,包括甲基组学(MeDIP-seq)、转录组学(RNA-seq)和miRNA表达谱分析。我们的研究结果表明,不可预测的光照会以性别特异性的方式改变松果体甲基组和转录组。然而,两性之间的转录组差异由于胁迫而增加,甲基组差异减少,特别是在Z染色体上。这些变化是由雌性(鸟类中的异配型性别)驱动的,雌性在暴露于光照胁迫后松果体甲基组变得更像雄性,导致表观遗传性别二态性减少,同时保持基因表达水平的差异。此外,我们实施了一个固定性别效应模型作为概念的生物学证明,确定了一个由12个关键核心基因组成的网络,这些基因与102个其他基因相互作用,这些基因都与昼夜节律调节和压力适应有关。这个基因网络包括昼夜节律反应的核心调控框架。此外,组织特异性表达分析和细胞类型特异性表达分析显示,对昼夜节律功能至关重要的大脑区域富集,包括参与昼夜节律调节的神经元群和下丘脑-垂体-甲状腺轴。总之,这些发现为松果体在光照胁迫下的性别特异性表观遗传转录组反应提供了强有力的证据,并为不同基因组水平与昼夜节律反应的相互作用提供了有价值的见解。
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来源期刊
Journal of Pineal Research
Journal of Pineal Research 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
17.70
自引率
4.90%
发文量
66
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Pineal Research welcomes original scientific research on the pineal gland and melatonin in vertebrates, as well as the biological functions of melatonin in non-vertebrates, plants, and microorganisms. Criteria for publication include scientific importance, novelty, timeliness, and clarity of presentation. The journal considers experimental data that challenge current thinking and welcomes case reports contributing to understanding the pineal gland and melatonin research. Its aim is to serve researchers in all disciplines related to the pineal gland and melatonin.
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