posted on 2018-02-27, 00:00authored byMarie Trijau, Jana Asselman, Olivier Armant, Christelle Adam-Guillermin, Karel A. C. De Schamphelaere, Frédéric Alonzo
Our
aim was to investigate epigenetic changes in Daphnia
magna after a 25-day chronic external γ
irradiation (generation F0 exposed to 6.5 μGy·h–1 or 41.3 mGy·h–1) and their potential inheritance
by subsequent recovering generations, namely, F2 (exposed as germline
cells in F1 embryos) and F3 (the first truly unexposed generation).
Effects on survival, growth, and reproduction were observed and DNA
was extracted for whole-genome bisulfite sequencing in all generations.
Results showed effects on reproduction in F0 but no effect in the
subsequent generations F1, F2, and F3. In contrast, we observed significant
methylation changes at specific CpG positions in every generation
independent of dose rate, with a majority of hypomethylation. Some
of these changes were shared between dose rates and between generations.
Associated gene functions included gene families and genes that were
previously shown to play roles during exposure to ionizing radiation.
Common methylation changes detected between generations F2 and F3
clearly showed that epigenetic modifications can be transmitted to
unexposed generations, most likely through the germline, with potential
implications for environmental risk.