» Articles » PMID: 33189388

Impact of Parental Exposure on Offspring Health in Humans

Overview
Journal Trends Genet
Specialty Genetics
Date 2020 Nov 15
PMID 33189388
Citations 32
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The possibility that parental life experiences and environmental exposures influence mental and physical health across generations is an important concept in biology and medicine. Evidence from animal models has established the existence of a non-genetic mode of inheritance. This form of heredity involves transmission of the effects of parental exposure to the offspring through epigenetic changes in the germline. Studying the mechanisms of epigenetic inheritance in humans is challenging because it is difficult to obtain multigeneration cohorts, to collect reproductive cells in exposed parents, and to exclude psychosocial and cultural confounders. Nonetheless, epidemiological studies in humans exposed to famine, stress/trauma, or toxicants have provided evidence that parental exposure can impact the health of descendants, in some cases, across several generations. A few studies have also started to reveal epigenetic changes in the periphery and sperm after certain exposures. This article reviews these studies and evaluates the current evidence for the potential contribution of epigenetic factors to heredity in humans. The challenges and limitations of this fundamental biological process, its implications, and its societal relevance are also discussed.

Citing Articles

A lack of commensal microbiota influences the male reproductive tract intergenerationally in mice.

Trigg N, Zhou S, Harris J, Lamonica M, Nelson M, Silverman M Reproduction. 2025; 169(4).

PMID: 39946159 PMC: 11906130. DOI: 10.1530/REP-24-0204.


Epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of toxicant exposure-specific non-coding RNA in sperm.

McSwiggin H, Magalhaes R, Nilsson E, Yan W, Skinner M Environ Epigenet. 2024; 10(1):dvae014.

PMID: 39494159 PMC: 11529619. DOI: 10.1093/eep/dvae014.


Enduring memory consequences of early-life stress / adversity: Structural, synaptic, molecular and epigenetic mechanisms.

Baram T, Birnie M Neurobiol Stress. 2024; 33:100669.

PMID: 39309367 PMC: 11415888. DOI: 10.1016/j.ynstr.2024.100669.


Paternal hypercholesterolemia elicits sex-specific exacerbation of atherosclerosis in offspring.

Hernandez R, Li X, Shi J, Dave T, Zhou T, Chen Q JCI Insight. 2024; 9(17).

PMID: 39253968 PMC: 11385100. DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.179291.


Transgenerational effects of early life stress on the fecal microbiota in mice.

Otaru N, Kourouma L, Pugin B, Constancias F, Braegger C, Mansuy I Commun Biol. 2024; 7(1):670.

PMID: 38822061 PMC: 11143345. DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06279-2.