| Literature DB >> 27405453 |
Abstract
A recently published article in Genome Biology attempts to refute important aspects of the phenomenon of transgenerational epigenetic inheritance (TEI). An alternative explanation of the data is offered here, showing that TEI is indeed not contradicted.Please see related Correspondence article: www.dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-0981-5 and related Research article: http://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-015-0619-z.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27405453 PMCID: PMC4943006 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-016-0982-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Power analysis for 2 vs. 2 comparisons using the ssize R script
| Fold change | Power (%) | Type II error (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 1.2 | 9.44 | 90.56 |
| 1.3 | 10.96 | 89.04 |
| 1.4 | 12.57 | 87.43 |
| 1.5 | 14.27 | 85.73 |
| 1.6 | 16.05 | 83.95 |
| 1.7 | 17.91 | 82.09 |
| 1.8 | 19.83 | 80.17 |
| 1.9 | 21.81 | 78.19 |
| 2 | 23.85 | 76.15 |
Fig. 1Venn diagram representations built using the same data shown in Table 3 of Iqbal et al.’s study [6]. Numbers inside the balloons represent the genes with altered DNA methylation in each generation (G1 or G2), in sperm or MGC, in response to each exposure tested (BPA, DEHP, or vinclozolin). The intersections between the G1 and G2 generation balloons show the number of common genes epigenetically altered in these two generations in response to the different exposures
Fig. 2Venn diagram representations built using the same data shown in Table 3 of Iqbal et al.’s study [6]. Numbers inside the balloons represent the genes with altered DNA methylation in each generation (G1 or G2), in sperm or MGC, in response to vinclozolin exposure. The intersection between the “MGC” and “Sperm” balloons shows the number of common genes epigenetically altered in these two differentiation stages, in each generation. DNA methylation alterations in exactly the same direction in “MGC” and “Sperm” are shown in parenthesis