2024-01-23T07:24:16Z
2024-01-23T07:24:16Z
2023
Recent research has provided compelling evidence demonstrating that paternal exposure to different stressors can influence their offspring's phenotypes. We hypothesized that paternal stress can negatively impact the progeny, altering different miRs and triggering different physiological alterations that could compromise offspring development. To investigate this, we exposed zebrafish male siblings to a chronic stress protocol for 21 days. We performed RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) analyses to identify differentially expressed small noncoding RNAs in 7-day postfertilization (dpf) larvae derived from paternally stressed males crossed with control females compared with the control progeny. We found a single miRNA differentially expressed-miR-29a-which was validated in larva and was also tested in the sperm, testicles, and brain of the stressed progenitors. We observed a vertical transmission of chronic stress to the unexposed larvae, reporting novel consequences of paternally inherited chronic stress at a molecular level. The deregulation of mi-R29a in those larvae could affect relevant biological processes affecting development, morphogenesis, or neurogenesis, among others. Additionally, these disruptions were associated with reduced rates of survival and hatching in the affected offspring.
This research was funded by grant PID2019-108509RB-I00-MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033. D.G.V. was funded by grant IJC2020-044091-I-MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033. A.E.-C. is funded by ISCIII /MINECO (PT17/0009/0019) and cofunded by FEDER.
Article
Published version
English
RNA-seq; Behavior; Chronic stress; Hatching rates; Malformations; Offspring; Small-RNAs; Survival
MDPI
Int J Mol Sci. 2023 Sep 14;24(18):14107
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/2PE/PID2019-108509RB-I00
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/2PE/IJC2020-044091-I
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