Transgenerational inheritance of behavioral and metabolic effects of paternal exposure to traumatic stress in early postnatal life: evidence in the 4th generation.

IF 4.8 Q1 GENETICS & HEREDITY Environmental Epigenetics Pub Date : 2018-10-16 eCollection Date: 2018-04-01 DOI:10.1093/eep/dvy023
Gretchen van Steenwyk, Martin Roszkowski, Francesca Manuella, Tamara B Franklin, Isabelle M Mansuy
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引用次数: 75

Abstract

Abstract In the past decades, evidence supporting the transmission of acquired traits across generations has reshaped the field of genetics and the understanding of disease susceptibility. In humans, pioneer studies showed that exposure to famine, endocrine disruptors or trauma can affect descendants, and has led to a paradigm shift in thinking about heredity. Studies in humans have however been limited by the low number of successive generations, the different conditions that can be examined, and the lack of mechanistic insight they can provide. Animal models have been instrumental to circumvent these limitations and allowed studies on the mechanisms of inheritance of environmentally induced traits across generations in controlled and reproducible settings. However, most models available today are only intergenerational and do not demonstrate transmission beyond the direct offspring of exposed individuals. Here, we report transgenerational transmission of behavioral and metabolic phenotypes up to the 4th generation in a mouse model of paternal postnatal trauma (MSUS). Based on large animal numbers (up to 124 per group) from several independent breedings conducted 10 years apart by different experimenters, we show that depressive-like behaviors are transmitted to the offspring until the third generation, and risk-taking and glucose dysregulation until the fourth generation via males. The symptoms are consistent and reproducible, and persist with similar severity across generations. These results provide strong evidence that adverse conditions in early postnatal life can have transgenerational effects, and highlight the validity of MSUS as a solid model of transgenerational epigenetic inheritance.

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父亲在产后早期暴露于创伤应激的行为和代谢影响的跨代遗传:第四代证据。
在过去的几十年里,支持获得性性状跨代传播的证据重塑了遗传学领域和对疾病易感性的理解。在人类中,先驱研究表明,暴露于饥荒、内分泌干扰物或创伤会影响后代,并导致对遗传的思考范式转变。然而,对人类的研究受到了后代数量少、可以检查的不同条件以及它们所能提供的缺乏机械洞察力的限制。动物模型有助于规避这些限制,并允许在可控和可重复的环境中研究环境诱导性状的跨代遗传机制。然而,目前可用的大多数模型仅是代际的,并不能证明暴露个体的直系后代以外的传播。在这里,我们报告了在父亲产后创伤(MSUS)小鼠模型中,行为和代谢表型的跨代传递直到第四代。根据不同实验人员间隔10年进行的几次独立繁殖的大量动物(每组多达124只),我们发现,类似抑郁的行为会通过雄性遗传给后代,直到第三代,冒险和血糖失调会通过雄性遗传给第四代。这些症状是一致的和可重复的,并且在几代人中以相似的严重程度持续存在。这些结果提供了强有力的证据,表明出生后早期生活中的不利条件可能具有跨代影响,并强调了MSUS作为跨代表观遗传的坚实模型的有效性。
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来源期刊
Environmental Epigenetics
Environmental Epigenetics GENETICS & HEREDITY-
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
5.30%
发文量
0
审稿时长
17 weeks
期刊最新文献
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