K. Karami , S. Rousse , F. Pitel , S. Eynard , D. Gourichon , S. Leroux , A. Ricard , I. David
{"title":"Transmissibility model to evaluate transgenerational transmission of environmental effects in quails","authors":"K. Karami , S. Rousse , F. Pitel , S. Eynard , D. Gourichon , S. Leroux , A. Ricard , I. David","doi":"10.1016/j.animal.2025.101636","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Both genetic and non-genetic information, which contribute to the development of phenotypes, can be transmitted across generations. Non-genetic information can be modified by the environment, allowing environmental effects to be transmitted to the next generation. The objective of the present study was to use an experimental design in quail combined with the transmissibility models, to demonstrate the vertical transmission of environmental effects. The study involved creating two lines: a control line and a treatment line, where female quails were fed a genistein-supplemented diet. Genistein is an endocrine disruptor that affects methylation patterns. Then, reproduction of these lines was conducted in a mirrored mating design over three generations, with a total of 1 566 animals studied. Quails underwent behavioural tests measuring locomotor activity and were weighed at one, four, and 7 weeks of age. At slaughter, body and abdominal adipose weights were recorded. The transmissibility model was a mixed model with fixed effects of rearing condition, sex, generation, age at time of measurement and direct effect of the genistein (on the animal, embryo and germ cells) and the random effect of the transmissible potential of the animal which transmissibility matrix contains sire and dam path coefficients of transmission that have to be estimated conversely to the genetic model where they are fixed to 0.5. The transmissibility model with environment included additional covariance for offspring of genistein-fed dams which is then transmitted to next generations via sires and dams. Models were chosen according to the likelihood ratio test. The proportion of transmitted variance varied from 0.34 (at 1 week) to 0.72 (at 7 weeks) for BW, 0.20 for the behavioural trait and 0.22 for adiposity. The estimated sire and dam path coefficients ranged from 0.42 to 0.52, but were not significantly different from 0.50. With the transmissibility model with environment, the additional covariance was significantly different from zero for BW traits, indicating transgenerational transmission of genistein’s effects. This value corresponded to a high correlation at 1 week (0.44) but low for other BW traits. The transmissibility model with environment demonstrated the transgenerational transmission of genistein-induced environmental effects on BW traits in quail, putatively mediated by epigenetic inheritance. The findings suggest that beneficial environmental factors can positively impact multiple generations, and combining this with genetic selection could accelerate adaptation to new environmental challenges.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":50789,"journal":{"name":"Animal","volume":"19 10","pages":"Article 101636"},"PeriodicalIF":4.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-08-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Animal","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731125002198","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Both genetic and non-genetic information, which contribute to the development of phenotypes, can be transmitted across generations. Non-genetic information can be modified by the environment, allowing environmental effects to be transmitted to the next generation. The objective of the present study was to use an experimental design in quail combined with the transmissibility models, to demonstrate the vertical transmission of environmental effects. The study involved creating two lines: a control line and a treatment line, where female quails were fed a genistein-supplemented diet. Genistein is an endocrine disruptor that affects methylation patterns. Then, reproduction of these lines was conducted in a mirrored mating design over three generations, with a total of 1 566 animals studied. Quails underwent behavioural tests measuring locomotor activity and were weighed at one, four, and 7 weeks of age. At slaughter, body and abdominal adipose weights were recorded. The transmissibility model was a mixed model with fixed effects of rearing condition, sex, generation, age at time of measurement and direct effect of the genistein (on the animal, embryo and germ cells) and the random effect of the transmissible potential of the animal which transmissibility matrix contains sire and dam path coefficients of transmission that have to be estimated conversely to the genetic model where they are fixed to 0.5. The transmissibility model with environment included additional covariance for offspring of genistein-fed dams which is then transmitted to next generations via sires and dams. Models were chosen according to the likelihood ratio test. The proportion of transmitted variance varied from 0.34 (at 1 week) to 0.72 (at 7 weeks) for BW, 0.20 for the behavioural trait and 0.22 for adiposity. The estimated sire and dam path coefficients ranged from 0.42 to 0.52, but were not significantly different from 0.50. With the transmissibility model with environment, the additional covariance was significantly different from zero for BW traits, indicating transgenerational transmission of genistein’s effects. This value corresponded to a high correlation at 1 week (0.44) but low for other BW traits. The transmissibility model with environment demonstrated the transgenerational transmission of genistein-induced environmental effects on BW traits in quail, putatively mediated by epigenetic inheritance. The findings suggest that beneficial environmental factors can positively impact multiple generations, and combining this with genetic selection could accelerate adaptation to new environmental challenges.
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animal attracts the best research in animal biology and animal systems from across the spectrum of the agricultural, biomedical, and environmental sciences. It is the central element in an exciting collaboration between the British Society of Animal Science (BSAS), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) and the European Federation of Animal Science (EAAP) and represents a merging of three scientific journals: Animal Science; Animal Research; Reproduction, Nutrition, Development. animal publishes original cutting-edge research, ''hot'' topics and horizon-scanning reviews on animal-related aspects of the life sciences at the molecular, cellular, organ, whole animal and production system levels. The main subject areas include: breeding and genetics; nutrition; physiology and functional biology of systems; behaviour, health and welfare; farming systems, environmental impact and climate change; product quality, human health and well-being. Animal models and papers dealing with the integration of research between these topics and their impact on the environment and people are particularly welcome.