Within-individual repeatability in telomere length: a meta-analysis in
non-mammalian vertebrates
Abstract
Telomere length is increasingly used as a biomarker of long-term life
history costs, ageing and future survival prospects. Yet, to have the
potential to predict long-term outcomes, telomere length should exhibit
a relatively high within-individual repeatability over time, which has
been largely overlooked in past studies. To fill this gap, we conducted
a meta-analysis on 74 studies reporting longitudinal telomere length
assessment in non-mammalian vertebrates, with the aim to establish the
current pattern of within-individual repeatability in telomere length
and to identify the methodological (e.g. qPCR/TRF, study length)
and biological factors (e.g. taxon, wild/captive, age class,
species lifespan, phylogeny) that may affect it. While the median
within-individual repeatability of telomere length was moderate to high
(R = 0.55; 95% CI: 0.05-0.95; N = 82), marked heterogeneity
between studies was evident. Measurement method affected strongly
repeatability estimate, with TRF-based studies exhibiting high
repeatability (R = 0.80; 95% CI: 0.34-0.96; N = 25), while
repeatability of qPCR-based studies was only half of that and more
variable (R = 0.46; 95% CI: 0.04-0.82; N = 57). While phylogeny
explained some variance in repeatability, phylogenetic signal was not
significant (λ = 0.32; 95% CI: 0.00-0.83). None of the
biological factors investigated here had a statistically significant
association with the repeatability of telomere length, being potentially
obscured by methodological noise. Our meta-analysis highlights the need
to carefully evaluate and consider within-individual repeatability in
telomere studies to ensure the robustness of using telomere length as a
biomarker of long-term survival and fitness prospects.