| Literature DB >> 27457668 |
Jian Li1, Oleg Tsuprykov, Xiaoping Yang, Berthold Hocher.
Abstract
Early - intrauterine - environmental factors are linked to the development of cardiovascular disease in later life. Traditionally, these factors are considered to be maternal factors such as maternal under and overnutrition, exposure to toxins, lack of micronutrients, and stress during pregnancy. However, in the recent years, it became obvious that also paternal environmental factors before conception and during sperm development determine the health of the offspring in later life. We will first describe clinical observational studies providing evidence for paternal programming of adulthood diseases in progeny. Next, we describe key animal studies proving this relationship, followed by a detailed analysis of our current understanding of the underlying molecular mechanisms of paternal programming. Alterations of noncoding sperm micro-RNAs, histone acetylation, and targeted as well as global DNA methylation seem to be in particular involved in paternal programming of offspring's diseases in later life.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27457668 PMCID: PMC5051533 DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0000000000001051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hypertens ISSN: 0263-6352 Impact factor: 4.844
List of epidemiological studies on programming effects of paternal exposure to various risk factors
| Risk factor | Source country | Group size ( | The main findings of the study | Reference |
| Overnutrition | Sweden | 1626 (F0 and F1) 271 (F2) | Longevity of male descendants of paternal grandfathers with overnutrition during SGP was reduced | [ |
| Overnutrition | Sweden | 239 (F2) | Cardiovascular and diabetes mortality in offspring of paternal grandfather with overnutrition during SGP was increased | [ |
| Height | United Kingdom | 226 parent–child trios | Height is transmitted to an offspring by both parents | [ |
| BMI and height | Ireland | 669 families and 529 children | Early childhood BMI in offspring is correlated only with maternal line. Offspring height is correlated with both maternal and paternal lines | [ |
| BMI | United Kingdom | 4091 parent–child trios | The amount of fat in offspring at 9–11 years of age is positively correlated with both maternal and paternal BMI, although maternal effect was more pronounced | [ |
| BMI | Norway | 29 216 parent–child trios | Offspring BMI at 3 years of age is positively correlated with both maternal and paternal BMI | [ |
| BMI | China | 899 parent–child trios | Paternal BMI is correlated with birth parameters of male offspring only: birth weight, biparietal diameter, head circumference, abdominal diameter, abdominal circumference, and pectoral diameter | [ |
| Body fat | United Kingdom | 39 mothers, 36 fathers, and 47 daughters | Paternal body fat predicts the changes in body fat of premenarcheal daughters | [ |
| Cardiovascular risk factors | Norway | 36 528 parent–child trios | Parent–offspring associations of anthropometric factors, blood pressure, blood lipids, glucose, and resting heart rate are largely similar between fathers and mothers | [ |
| Betel quid chewing | China | 5037 parent–child trios | Exposure to paternal betel quid chewing increases the risk of early manifestation of metabolic syndrome in human offspring in a dose-dependent manner | [ |
| Smoking | Sweden | 1818 (F0 and F1) and 303 F2 | Early paternal smoking is associated with greater BMI at 9 years of age in sons, but not in daughters | [ |
| Age | New Zealand | 196 fathers and 277 children | Increasing paternal age at childbirth is associated with a more favorable phenotype in their children (taller and slimmer, with better insulin sensitivity in girls) but with a less favorable lipid profile | [ |
| Type 2 diabetes | United States | 1608 offspring | The offspring of diabetic fathers were lighter than the offspring of nondiabetic fathers and had an increased risk of diabetes in later life | [ |
| Type 2 diabetes | United States | 36 parent–child trios | Offspring of fathers with early-onset diabetes (age <35 years) were leaner and had lower early insulin secretion | [ |
| Type 2 diabetes | United Kingdom | 8133 (F0), 6328 (F1), and 2173 (F2) | The offspring of the fathers with diabetes had decreased birth weight | [ |
| Low birth weight | Denmark | 1097 mothers, 1063 fathers, and 2042 children | Paternal birth weight is positively associated with children's birth weight | [ |
| Low birth weight | India | 193 mothers, 144 fathers, and 506 children | Paternal birth weight was inversely related to offspring metabolic syndrome | [ |
F0, grandparents, F1, parents; F2, offspring; SGP, slow growth period.
List of animal studies on programming effects of paternal exposure to various risk factors during embryonic development
| Risk factor | Animal | Exposure time | Result | Mechanism | Reference |
| Intrauterine hyperglycemia | Female ICR mice | Intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin in pregnancy day 1 | Intrauterine hyperglycemia induced IGT and abnormal insulin levels in F1 and F2 offspring, and the IGT of male was obvious than that of female which showed sex-specific characteristics | Intrauterine glycaemia-induced abnormal IGF2/ | [ |
| HFD (45% of lipids) | Female C57Bl/6 : 129 hybrid mice | 4 weeks before pregnancy until weaning week 4 | Increased F1 and F2 body length and insulin insensitivity via both maternal and paternal lines. But only increased F3 females body length and body weight via the paternal lineage | Alterations in the | [ |
| Maternal undernutrition (50% caloric restriction) | Female ICR mice | From pregnancy day 12.5 until delivery | Reduced birth weight and impaired glucose intolerance progresses to F2 offspring through the paternal line | IGT in both F1 and F2 caused by impaired β-cell function because of dysregulation of β-cell ATP-dependent K+ channel | [ |
| Methionine deficiency | Muscovy duck | During pregnancy | F2 duck progeny of F0 paternal grandmothers fed a methionine-deficient diet exhibited low body weight and impaired lipid metabolism | The mechanisms were not proposed by the authors | [ |
| Endocrine disruptor compounds (BPA, DEHP, DBP) | Female Sprague–Dawley rats | From pregnancy days 8–14 | Kidney and prostate disease were observed in the direct fetally exposed F1 generation. Pubertal abnormalities, testis abnormalities, obesity, and ovarian disease (primary ovarian insufficiency and polycystic ovaries) were increased in the F3 generation animals | Analysis of the sperm epigenome identified 197 differential DMRs in gene promoters, including DMR in five known obesity-related genes – | [ |
| Endocrine disruptor (vinclozolin) | Female Sprague–Dawley rats | From pregnancy days 8–14 | Transgenerational adult-onset disease in the F3 generation (male and female), including spermatogenic cell defects, testicular abnormalities, prostate abnormalities, kidney abnormalities, and polycystic ovarian disease | 16 differentially methylated gene promoters were identified in F3 generation sperm epigenome | [ |
| Hydrocarbon mixture involving jet fuel (JP-8) | Female Sprague–Dawley rats | From pregnancy days 8–14 | Increased incidence of primordial follicle loss and polycystic ovarian disease in females, and obesity in both females and males | Analysis of the jet fuel lineage F3 generation sperm epigenome identified 33 differential DMRs. The affected genes are involved in cellular processes such as cell signaling, energy metabolism, and regulation of transcription | [ |
DMR,7 DNA methylation regions; F0, grandparents, F1, parents; F2, offspring; GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; GHSR, growth hormone secretagogue receptor; HFD, high-fat diet; IGT, impaired glucose tolerance.
List of animal studies on programming effects of paternal exposure to various risk factors during prepuberty and spermatogenesis period
| Risk factor | Animal | Exposure time | Result | Mechanism | Reference |
| Low-protein diet (11% of protein) | Male C57/Bl6 mice | From age 3 week to age 9–12 weeks before mating | F1 male offsprings of 3 weeks exhibited elevated hepatic expression of many genes involved in lipid and cholesterol biosynthesis and decreased levels of cholesterol esters | Epigenomic profiling of offspring livers revealed numerous modest (20%) changes in cytosine methylation depending on paternal diet, including reproducible changes in methylation over a likely enhancer for the key lipid regulator | [ |
| Low-protein diet (11% of protein) | Male C57BL/6 mice | From age 11 week to age 18 week, 7 weeks before mating | Adult offspring display significantly impaired cardiovascular and metabolic homeostasis. Male offspring birth weight increased. Adult male offspring developed relative hypotension and elevated heart rate | Male offspring had elevated adiposity, reduced heart to body weight ratio, and elevated circulating TNFα levels. Analysis of genes involved in calcium signaling revealed significantly decreased expression of adenylate cyclase 5 ( | [ |
| HFD (43% of lipids) | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | From age 4 weeks to age 13 weeks, 9 weeks before mating | Female offspring of male Sprague–Dawley rats fed with HFD had an early onset of impaired insulin secretion and glucose tolerance that worsened with time | Changes in metabolic health in F1 female offspring were concomitant with altered pancreatic and adipose function, with an increased insulin section, a reduced pancreatic islet cell size, and alterations to methylation and gene profiles | [ |
| HFD (49% of lipids) | Male C57BL/6 mice | From age 4 weeks to age 12 weeks, 8 weeks before mating | Offspring presented high fasting glucose, decreased glucose tolerance, and liver steatosis | [ | |
| HFD (22% of lipids) | Male C57BL/6 mice | From age 5 weeks to age 15 weeks, 9–10 weeks before mating | HFD causes paternal obesity fertility disturbance and initiate the transmission of obesity and IGT and insulin sensitivity to F1 and F2 generations. Moreover, the metabolic and fertility disturbances in male offspring sired by HFD fathers are exacerbated by a ‘second-hit’ of exposure to the same obesogenic environment postnatally | HFD diminishes the reproductive health of F0, F1, and F2 males (reduced sperm motility, sperm ROS increased, DNA damage increased) and F1 and F2 female (reduced meiotic competence of oocytes and altered mitochondrial MMP in all regions of the oocytes). HFD-induced paternal obesity modulates sperm microRNA content and germ cell methylation status, which are potential signals that program offspring health and initiate the transmission of obesity and impaired metabolic health to future generations | |
| HFD (22% of lipids) | Male C57BL/6 mice | From age 5 weeks to age 15 weeks, 9–10 weeks before mating | HFD delayed offspring embryo growth and placenta growth | HFD reduced F1 blastocyst cell numbers, increased rates of glycolysis impaired mitochondrial function, alterations to active and repressive embryonic chromatin marks (H3K27me3), and resulting in aberrant placental gene expression | [ |
| HFD (60% of lipids) | Male C57BL/6 mice | From age 6 weeks, 10 weeks before mating | Liver gene expression of male offspring and chromatin of paternal spermatozoa were different | Differences in liver mRNA expression of five genes, namely, metallothionein-1 and 2 ( | [ |
| High methylating micronutrient diet | Large Swiss white pig | From age 35 days, 5 month before mating | F2 offspring had a higher percentage of shoulder fat and were leaner | Microarray gene expression profiling showed that liver and muscle respective pathways of lipid metabolism and metabolic pathway were overrepresented for the differentially expressed genes between groups. The | [ |
| Acute high-sugar diet | Male w1118 | 2 days before mating | Acute paternal dietary sugar increased F1 body weight, obesity, food intake, and changed metabolic control | Paternal diet-induced obesity has been shown to alter epigenetic chromatin marks (H3K27me3) in | [ |
| Dietary restriction of bactopeptone – a growth media for bacteria, which in turn serves as major food supply for the nematode | Nematode | Worms were dietary restricted for 48 h and then starved for 24 h or | Increasing the extent of paternal dietary restriction led to a successive increase in fat content of progeny until reaching a maximum of about 160% of control. Further reduction of paternal food to very low levels decreased fat content of offspring to those levels found in the control experiment | The mechanisms were not proposed by the authors | [ |
HFD, high-fat diet.
List of animal studies on programming effects of paternal exposure to various risk factors during periconceptional and zygote period
| Risk factor | Animal | Exposure time | Result | Mechanism | Reference |
| Hydrogen peroxide | C57Bl6 male mice sperm | Sperm was exposed to hydrogen peroxide, 1500 mmol/l, 1 h before fertilization | Female offspring manifesting as altered body composition and glucose regulation | Intracellular ROS levels, mitochondrial ROS, and lipid peroxidation of hydrogen peroxide-treated sperm increased. Treatment of sperm with hydrogen peroxide resulted in poorer embryo development and reduced fetal growth | [ |
| Water deprivation | Swiss male mice | One or six times fasting 1–4 weeks before mating | Offspring decrease in average serum glucose | Corticosterone and insulin-like growth factor-1 were changed | [ |
| RNAs | CD-1 mice | Injection of sperm heads, total RNAs, and tsRNA fractions from HFD male into normal zygotes | Generated metabolic disorders in the F1 offspring | Altered gene expression of metabolic pathways in early embryos and islets of F1 offspring | [ |
tsRNA, transfer RNA-derived small RNA.
FIGURE 1Paternal factors affecting spermatogenesis and causing transgenerational effects.
FIGURE 2Epigenetic windows of sensitivity to environmental factors in paternal lineage. The environmental risk factors inducing epigenetic alterations in paternal lineage can be classified into four groups. (a) Factors affecting paternal grandmother and paternal grandfather from embryonic period until conception of a future father. (b) Factors affecting a future father in embryonic period. (c) Factors affecting a future father in prepubertal and spermatogenesis periods. (d) Factors affecting a future father in periconceptional and zygote periods. Epigenetic modifications during the process of spermatogenesis include the following events: primordial germ cells – sperm precursor cells – undergo a genome-wide erasure of epigenetic memory via DNA demethylation and histone demethylation, specifically at lysine positions K4 and K9 of histone H3. Nevertheless, imprinted clusters and retrotransposons remain resistant to demethylation. In addition, on this step, histones H3 and H4 undergo deacetylation and DNA methyltransferases DNMT3A, DNMT3B, and DNMT3L are expressed. In contrast, in spermatogonia – the next sperm maturation step – DNA methylation starts and increases over time. Next, at spermatocyte stage, histone H3 undergoes methylation particularly at lysine positions K4 and K9. Subsequently, at the round spermatid stage, histones, in particular H4, undergo hyperacetylation, which in turn leads to substitution of histones with transition proteins. Sperm chromatin becomes more condensed as a result of the process of histone-to-protamine transition, lysine positions K9 of histone H3 becomes demethylated. Finally, mature spermatozoa possess epigenetic modifications [101,111,117–122].