It's already been established that a woman's diet can affect a baby's health, but it now appears that mothers aren't the only ones. What a father eats can have an impact on his children's health, too. (Credit: iStockphoto)
U. TEXAS-AUSTIN (US) — What a father includes in his diet passes down and is able to reprogram how genes function in his children.
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A new study published in Cell shows that environmental cues, including diet, influence genes in mammals from one generation to the next, suggesting paternal environmental effects may play a more important role in complex diseases such as diabetes and heart disease than previously believed.
“Knowing what your parents were doing before you were conceived is turning out to be important in determining what disease risk factors you may be carrying,” says Oliver Rando, associate professor of biochemistry and molecular pharmacology at the University of Massaschusetts, and coauthor of the study with Hans Hofmann, associate professor of integrative biology at the University of Texas at Austin.
The study details how paternal diet can increase production of cholesterol synthesis genes in first-generation offspring.
A number of recent studies have begun to draw attention to the role epigenetic inheritance—inherited changes in gene expression caused by mechanisms other than changes in the underlying DNA sequence—may play in a host of illnesses.
“A major and under-appreciated aspect of what is transmitted from parent to child is ancestral environment,” Rando says. “Our findings suggest that there are many ways that parents can ‘tell’ their children about what they ’saw.’”
To test the hypothesis that environmental influences experienced by the father can be passed down to the next generation in the form of changed epigenetic information, Rando and Hofmann fed different diets to two groups of male mice.
The first group received a standard diet, while the second received a low-protein diet. To control for maternal influences, all females were fed the same, standard diet. The offspring of the mice fed the low-protein diet exhibited a marked increase in the genes responsible for lipid and cholesterol synthesis in comparison to offspring of the control group fed the standard diet.
These observations are consistent with epidemiological data from two well-known human studies suggesting that parental diet has an effect on the health of offspring.
One of these studies, called the Överkalix Cohort Study, conducted among residents of an isolated community in the far northeast of Sweden, found that poor diet during the paternal grandfather’s adolescence increased the risk of diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease in second-generation offspring. However, because these studies are retrospective and involve dynamic populations, they are unable to completely account for all social and economic variables.
“Our study begins to rule out the possibility that social and economic factors, or differences in the DNA sequence, may be contributing to what we’re seeing,” Rando says. “It strongly implicates epigenetic inheritance as a contributing factor to changes in gene function.”
“It has increasingly become clear in recent years that mothers can endow their offspring with information about the environment, for instance via early experience and maternal factors, and thus make them possibly better adapted to environmental change,” says Hofmann.
“Our results show that offspring can inherit such acquired characters even from a parent they have never directly interacted with, which provides a novel mechanism through which natural selection could act in the course of evolution.”
The study suggests that a better understanding of the environment experienced by parents, such as diet, may be a useful clinical tool for assessing disease risk for illnesses, including diabetes and heart disease.
“We often look at a patient’s behavior and their genes to assess risk,” Rando says. “If the patient smokes, they are going to be at an increased risk for cancer. If the family has a long history of heart disease, they might carry a gene that makes them more susceptible to heart disease.
“But we’re more than just our genes and our behavior. Knowing what environmental factors your parents experienced is also important.”
The next step for the scientists is to explore how and why this genetic reprogramming is being transmitted from generation to generation.
“We don’t know why these genes are being reprogrammed or how, precisely, that information is being passed down to the next generation,” Rando says.
“It’s consistent with the idea that when parents go hungry, it’s best for offspring to hoard calories. However, it’s not clear if these changes are advantageous in the context of a low-protein diet.”
More news from University of Texas at Austin: www.utexas.edu/news/
Wow, talk about having an one's diet (or lack thereof) having a profound impact on others..
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