Transgenerational propensities for infant birth weight reflect fetal growth history of the mother in rhesus monkeys.

Trends in developmental biology Pub Date : 2019-12-01
Elizabeth A Shirtcliff, Gabriele R Lubach, Reilly Mooney, Robert T Beck, Laurel K Fanning, Christopher L Coe
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Abstract

Birth weight (BW) at delivery is an important developmental milestone indicative of prenatal conditions and portends of the postnatal growth trajectory that will occur during infancy and childhood. Previous research has documented that there are also many physiological and health consequences of being born either small-for-gestational age (SGA) or large-for-gestational age (LGA). Analyses of breeding animals have demonstrated further that a gravid female exerts a strong influence on the size of her infant by term, and this permissiveness or constraint over fetal growth can be transmitted from mothers to their daughters. The following research tested additional hypotheses about matrilineal effects on BW by examining records from a large breeding colony of rhesus monkeys across multiple generations. The analyses utilized BW of 1710 infant monkeys obtained over 4 decades. In addition to determining the association between the birth weight (BW) of a female and her own infants birthed later as a mother, the multi-generational transmission of birth size from a grandmother through her daughters to the next generation was examined. Other maternal influences were evident, including a progressive increase in infant BW with parity, which synergized with matrilineal effects across a female's reproductive life. In addition, our modeling indicated that if an infant's BW was discordant-a SGA female birthing a larger daughter-the discrepant fetal growth pattern could be accentuated in the next generation. Overall, the findings confirm that the size of an infant at term is significantly influenced by a type of gestational imprinting on daughters during the prenatal period, which then continues to shape birth outcomes in subsequent generations.

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婴儿出生体重的跨代倾向反映了恒河猴母亲的胎儿生长历史。
出生体重(BW)在分娩时是一个重要的发育里程碑,表明产前条件和预示出生后的生长轨迹,将发生在婴儿期和儿童期。先前的研究已经证明,小胎龄(SGA)或大胎龄(LGA)出生也有许多生理和健康后果。对繁殖动物的分析进一步表明,怀孕的雌性对其婴儿的大小有很强的影响,这种对胎儿生长的纵容或限制可以从母亲传递给女儿。接下来的研究通过检查一个大型恒河猴繁殖群体的多代记录,测试了关于母系对体重影响的其他假设。分析利用了40多年来获得的1710只幼猴的体重。除了确定女性的出生体重(BW)与其后来作为母亲出生的婴儿之间的关系外,还研究了出生体重从祖母通过她的女儿到下一代的多代传递。母系的其他影响也很明显,包括胎次后婴儿体重的逐渐增加,这与母系效应在雌性生殖寿命中的协同作用。此外,我们的模型表明,如果一个婴儿的体重不一致——SGA雌性生出一个更大的女儿——胎儿生长模式的差异可能会在下一代中加剧。总的来说,研究结果证实,足月婴儿的大小受到产前对女儿的一种妊娠印记的显著影响,这种印记随后继续影响后代的出生结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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