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Accounting for phylogenetic relatedness in cross-species analyses of telomere shortening rates

Subject: Life Science and Biomedicine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2020

Michael Le Pepke
Affiliation:
Centre for Biodiversity Dynamics (CBD), Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway
Dan T.A. Eisenberg
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA

Abstract

Telomeres are repeating DNA sequences found on the ends of chromosomes, which shorten with age and are implicated in senescence. Cross-species analyses of telomere shortening rates (TSR) and telomere lengths are important for understanding mechanisms underlying senescence, lifespan and life-history strategies of different species. Whittemore et al. (2019) generated a new dataset on variation in TSR, lifespan and body mass. In phylogenetically uncorrected analyses they found that TSR negatively correlates with lifespan. We re-ran analyses of their dataset using appropriate phylogenetic corrections. We found a strong phylogenetic signal in the association between TSR and body mass. We were able to corroborate Whittemore et al.’s major findings, including while correcting for body mass in a multivariate analysis. Since laboratory mice have different telomere lengths and potentially different telomere dynamics than wild mice, we removed mice from the analysis, which attenuates most associations.

Information

Type
Research Article
Information
Result type: Supplementary result
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2020
Figure 0

Figure 1. Phylogenetic relationships between species compared in Whittemore et al. (2019) with a time scale in million years ago (Ma).

Figure 1

Table 1. Results of non-phylogenetic (corresponding to Whittemore et al., 2019) and phylogenetic corrected regressions between species traits with and without the inbred laboratory mouse. Figure references are to figures in Whittemore et al. (2019).

Figure 2

Table 2. Phylogenetic multivariate analyses of average and maximum lifespan, respectively, versus TSR, initial TL and body mass with (w.) and without (w/o) the mouse samples.

Supplementary material: File

Pepke and Eisenberg supplementary material

Pepke and Eisenberg supplementary material

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Reviewing editor:  Reinder Radersma Wageningen University and Research, Plant Sciences, Droevendaalsesteeg 1, Wageningen, Netherlands, 6708 PB
This article has been accepted because it is deemed to be scientifically sound, has the correct controls, has appropriate methodology and is statistically valid, and met required revisions.

Review 1: Accounting for phylogenetic relatedness in cross-species analyses of telomere shortening rates

Conflict of interest statement

I have recently published a similar article. I do not know if it is a conflict of interest.Dear Editor,I have some concerns that I put to your attention. I have no major observations on the manuscript per se. The problems are the original data from the article of Whittemore et al. (2019) and the fact that I recently published a similar article.The authors correctly underline that interspecies comparison must be analysed with phylogenetic corrections. Nonetheless, some quantities are redundant (such as heart rate, which is inversely proportional to mass), other ones are improper and never used in these studies (“average” lifespan, which, by the way is also proportional to maximum lifespan, therefore redundant) and the data are inhomogeneous: some species comprise only adult, other ones adult+infant (this is important because telomeres shorten more rapidly in infants). Some of these problems have been raised in my letter (Udroiu, I. 2020. On the correlation between telomere shortening rate and life span. PNAS, 117, 2248-2249). I have not mentioned it in the Comments to the Author, as I do not want to be a reviewer that asks for citations of its own articles. By the way, if you consider it appropriate you could suggest it to the authors. Finally, since my article made essentially the same analyses made in the present manuscript, I do not know if this lack of originality is a problem for its acceptance.

Comments

Comments to the Author: The paper correctly starts from the fact that interspecies comparison must be analysed with phylogenetic corrections, and uses a phylogenetic generalized least squares method to re-analyse data from Whittemore et al. (2019). The article is simple and clear and I have only minor concerns. 1) Analyses made by the authors: data are log-transformed, which is correct (and this was not done by Whittemore et al.). Why do the authors have used also non-transformed data? Since lifespan and heart rate are directly and inversely correlated with body mass, all analyses could be redundant. In this case, analyses of residuals are usually performed, e.g.: mass against lifespan, I get residual lifespan and the I test correlation between residual lifespan and telomeres. 2) Original data: Average lifespan is a quite bizarre quantity in my view: in the best case it is redundant with maximum lifespan. Data are inhomogeneous: some species comprise only adult, other ones adult+infant (this is important because telomeres shorten more rapidly in infants). Data for lifespans (and perhaps body mass) should be checked: e.g., value for Phoenicopterus ruber is 60 years, while in Anage (the source cited by Whittemore et al.) it is reported as “Not yet established” (and it reports 44 years for Phoenicopterus roseus and 36.7 years for Phoenicopterus chilensis...). 3) Considerations of the authors: In my view, the authors correctly excluded laboratory mouse. Indeed, data for telomeres are from laboratory mice, but the record of max. lifespan is from a population of feral mice (see Anage), which usually have much shorter telomeres (12 kb like humans).

Presentation

Overall score 3 out of 5
Is the article written in clear and proper English? (30%)
4 out of 5
Is the data presented in the most useful manner? (40%)
3 out of 5
Does the paper cite relevant and related articles appropriately? (30%)
2 out of 5

Context

Overall score 4 out of 5
Does the title suitably represent the article? (25%)
5 out of 5
Does the abstract correctly embody the content of the article? (25%)
4 out of 5
Does the introduction give appropriate context? (25%)
3 out of 5
Is the objective of the experiment clearly defined? (25%)
4 out of 5

Analysis

Overall score 2.4 out of 5
Does the discussion adequately interpret the results presented? (40%)
2 out of 5
Is the conclusion consistent with the results and discussion? (40%)
3 out of 5
Are the limitations of the experiment as well as the contributions of the experiment clearly outlined? (20%)
2 out of 5

Review 2: Accounting for phylogenetic relatedness in cross-species analyses of telomere shortening rates

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

Comments to the Author: The authors conduct appropriate phylogenetic correction for a previous report (Whittemore et. al., 2019) to address the lack of such consideration in the relationship between telomere shortening rates (TSR) and lifespan in phylogenetically distant species. However, in order to mitigate model selection, phylogenetic correction should be included for the multivariate linear regressions using TSR, TL, body mass, and heart rate fit to average and maximum lifespans (Tables S5 and S6). This analysis will create a more robust argument for the role of TSR in determining lifespan since these other variables may contribute to the relationship. I suggest rewording the sentence in lines 16-18 of the abstract. More explicitly state the findings of Whittemore et. al., 2019 before mentioning how your additional analyses either did or did not change those findings. It may help to divide this into two different sentences, one per finding.

Presentation

Overall score 4.3 out of 5
Is the article written in clear and proper English? (30%)
4 out of 5
Is the data presented in the most useful manner? (40%)
4 out of 5
Does the paper cite relevant and related articles appropriately? (30%)
5 out of 5

Context

Overall score 5 out of 5
Does the title suitably represent the article? (25%)
5 out of 5
Does the abstract correctly embody the content of the article? (25%)
5 out of 5
Does the introduction give appropriate context? (25%)
5 out of 5
Is the objective of the experiment clearly defined? (25%)
5 out of 5

Analysis

Overall score 4 out of 5
Does the discussion adequately interpret the results presented? (40%)
4 out of 5
Is the conclusion consistent with the results and discussion? (40%)
4 out of 5
Are the limitations of the experiment as well as the contributions of the experiment clearly outlined? (20%)
4 out of 5