| Literature DB >> 34158610 |
Carrie V Breton1, Remy Landon2, Linda G Kahn3, Michelle Bosquet Enlow4, Alicia K Peterson2, Theresa Bastain2, Joseph Braun5, Sarah S Comstock6, Cristiane S Duarte7, Alison Hipwell8, Hong Ji9, Janine M LaSalle10, Rachel L Miller11, Rashelle Musci12, Jonathan Posner7, Rebecca Schmidt13, Shakira F Suglia14, Irene Tung8, Daniel Weisenberger15, Yeyi Zhu16, Rebecca Fry17.
Abstract
Environmental exposures, psychosocial stressors and nutrition are all potentially important influences that may impact health outcomes directly or via interactions with the genome or epigenome over generations. While there have been clear successes in large-scale human genetic studies in recent decades, there is still a substantial amount of missing heritability to be elucidated for complex childhood disorders. Mounting evidence, primarily in animals, suggests environmental exposures may generate or perpetuate altered health outcomes across one or more generations. One putative mechanism for these environmental health effects is via altered epigenetic regulation. This review highlights the current epidemiologic literature and supporting animal studies that describe intergenerational and transgenerational health effects of environmental exposures. Both maternal and paternal exposures and transmission patterns are considered, with attention paid to the attendant ethical, legal and social implications.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34158610 PMCID: PMC8219763 DOI: 10.1038/s42003-021-02316-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Commun Biol ISSN: 2399-3642
Fig. 1Intergenerational and transgenerational inheritance.
Depiction of inheritance patterns from the parent (F0) generation to the child (F1), grandchild (F2), and great-grandchild (F3) in humans and animals. An exposure in F0 can directly affect the developing fetus (F1) and the germ cells in F2; therefore, both routes of transmission are considered intergenerational. Transgenerational effects may be observed beginning with the F3 generation.
Fig. 2Opportunities in ECHO for understanding the influences of the environment on child health across generations.
The Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program, created in 2016, is an NIH-funded national program that supports existing observational and intervention studies to answer important questions about key developmental areas, including pre-, peri-, and early postnatal outcomes, airway conditions, obesity, and neurodevelopment. Exposures of interest include nutrition, tobacco smoke, pollutants, physical activity, drug usage, and stress. The ECHO program offers a unique platform and opportunity in which to explore the health effects of exposures, including more contemporaneous ones, that are present or have far-reaching consequences across generations.