Pre-Natal Epigenetic Influences on Acute and Chronic Diseases Later in Life, such as Cancer: Global Health Crises Resulting from a Collision of Biological and Cultural Evolution

J. Trosko
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引用次数: 19

Abstract

Better understanding of the complex factors leading to human diseases will be necessary for both long term prevention and for managing short and long-term health problems. The underlying causes, leading to a global health crisis in both acute and chronic diseases, include finite global health care resources for sustained healthy human survival, the population explosion, increased environmental pollution, decreased clean air, water, food distribution, diminishing opportunities for human self-esteem, increased median life span, and the interconnection of infectious and chronic diseases. The transition of our pre-human nutritional requirements for survival to our current culturally-shaped diet has created a biologically-mismatched human dietary experience. While individual genetic, gender, and developmental stage factors contribute to human diseases, various environmental and culturally-determined factors are now contributing to both acute and chronic diseases. The transition from the hunter-gatherer to an agricultural-dependent human being has brought about a global crisis in human health. Initially, early humans ate seasonally-dependent and calorically-restricted foods, during the day, in a “feast or famine” manner. Today, modern humans eat diets of caloric abundance, at all times of the day, with foods of all seasons and from all parts of the world, that have been processed and which have been contaminated by all kinds of factors. No longer can one view, as distinct, infectious agent-related human acute diseases from chronic diseases. Moreover, while dietary and environmental chemicals could, in principle, cause disease pathogenesis by mutagenic and cytotoxic mechanisms, the primary cause is via “epigenetic”, or altered gene expression, modifications in the three types of cells (e.g., adult stem; progenitor and terminally-differentiated cells of each organ) during all stages of human development. Even more significantly, alteration in the quantity of adult stem cells during early development by epigenetic chemicals could either increase or decrease the risk to various stem cell-based diseases, such as cancer, later in life. A new concept, the Barker hypothesis, has emerged that indicates pre-natal maternal dietary exposures can now affect diseases later in life. Examples from the studies of the atomic bomb survivors should illustrate this insight.
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产前表观遗传对生命后期急性和慢性疾病的影响,如癌症:生物和文化进化碰撞导致的全球健康危机
更好地了解导致人类疾病的复杂因素对于长期预防和管理短期和长期健康问题都是必要的。导致全球急性和慢性疾病健康危机的根本原因包括:维持人类健康生存所需的全球卫生保健资源有限、人口爆炸、环境污染加剧、清洁空气、水和食物分配减少、人类自尊机会减少、中位寿命延长以及传染病和慢性病相互关联。从人类之前的生存营养需求到我们当前文化塑造的饮食的转变,创造了一种生物上不匹配的人类饮食体验。虽然个人遗传、性别和发育阶段因素会导致人类疾病,但各种环境和文化决定因素现在也会导致急性和慢性疾病。从狩猎采集者到依赖农业的人类的转变给人类健康带来了全球性的危机。最初,早期人类在白天以“盛宴或饥荒”的方式吃季节性依赖和热量限制的食物。今天,现代人在一天中的任何时候都吃着热量丰富的食物,吃着来自世界各地的各种季节的食物,这些食物经过加工,受到各种因素的污染。人们不能再把与传染原有关的人类急性疾病与慢性病区别开来。此外,虽然饮食和环境化学品原则上可通过诱变和细胞毒性机制引起疾病发病,但主要原因是通过"表观遗传"或改变基因表达,即三种类型细胞的改变(例如,成体干细胞;每个器官的祖细胞和终末分化细胞)在人类发育的所有阶段。更重要的是,表观遗传化学物质在早期发育过程中改变成体干细胞的数量,可能会增加或减少生命后期患各种基于干细胞的疾病(如癌症)的风险。一个新的概念,巴克假说,已经出现,表明产前母亲的饮食暴露现在可以影响以后的生活疾病。对原子弹幸存者的研究可以说明这一点。
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