Change in paternal grandmothers' early food supply influenced cardiovascular mortality of the female grandchildren

This study investigated whether large fluctuations in food availability during grandparents' early development influenced grandchildren's cardiovascular mortality. We reported earlier that changes in availability of food - from good to poor or from poor to good - during intrauterine develo...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC genetics 2014, Vol.15 (1), p.12-12
Hauptverfasser: Bygren, Lars Olov, Tinghög, Petter, Carstensen, John, Edvinsson, Sören, Kaati, Gunnar, Pembrey, Marcus E, Sjöström, Michael
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container_title BMC genetics
container_volume 15
creator Bygren, Lars Olov
Tinghög, Petter
Carstensen, John
Edvinsson, Sören
Kaati, Gunnar
Pembrey, Marcus E
Sjöström, Michael
description This study investigated whether large fluctuations in food availability during grandparents' early development influenced grandchildren's cardiovascular mortality. We reported earlier that changes in availability of food - from good to poor or from poor to good - during intrauterine development was followed by a double risk of sudden death as an adult, and that mortality rate can be associated with ancestors' childhood availability of food. We have now studied transgenerational responses (TGR) to sharp differences of harvest between two consecutive years' for ancestors of 317 people in Överkalix, Sweden. The confidence intervals were very wide but we found a striking TGR. There was no response in cardiovascular mortality in the grandchild from sharp changes of early exposure, experienced by three of the four grandparents (maternal grandparents and paternal grandfathers). If, however, the paternal grandmother up to puberty lived through a sharp change in food supply from one year to next, her sons' daughters had an excess risk for cardiovascular mortality (HR 2.69, 95% confidence interval 1.05-6.92). Selection or learning and imitation are unlikely explanations. X-linked epigenetic inheritance via spermatozoa seemed to be plausible, with the transmission, limited to being through the father, possibly explained by the sex differences in meiosis. The shock of change in food availability seems to give specific transgenerational responses.
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We reported earlier that changes in availability of food - from good to poor or from poor to good - during intrauterine development was followed by a double risk of sudden death as an adult, and that mortality rate can be associated with ancestors' childhood availability of food. We have now studied transgenerational responses (TGR) to sharp differences of harvest between two consecutive years' for ancestors of 317 people in Överkalix, Sweden. The confidence intervals were very wide but we found a striking TGR. There was no response in cardiovascular mortality in the grandchild from sharp changes of early exposure, experienced by three of the four grandparents (maternal grandparents and paternal grandfathers). If, however, the paternal grandmother up to puberty lived through a sharp change in food supply from one year to next, her sons' daughters had an excess risk for cardiovascular mortality (HR 2.69, 95% confidence interval 1.05-6.92). Selection or learning and imitation are unlikely explanations. X-linked epigenetic inheritance via spermatozoa seemed to be plausible, with the transmission, limited to being through the father, possibly explained by the sex differences in meiosis. 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We reported earlier that changes in availability of food - from good to poor or from poor to good - during intrauterine development was followed by a double risk of sudden death as an adult, and that mortality rate can be associated with ancestors' childhood availability of food. We have now studied transgenerational responses (TGR) to sharp differences of harvest between two consecutive years' for ancestors of 317 people in Överkalix, Sweden. The confidence intervals were very wide but we found a striking TGR. There was no response in cardiovascular mortality in the grandchild from sharp changes of early exposure, experienced by three of the four grandparents (maternal grandparents and paternal grandfathers). If, however, the paternal grandmother up to puberty lived through a sharp change in food supply from one year to next, her sons' daughters had an excess risk for cardiovascular mortality (HR 2.69, 95% confidence interval 1.05-6.92). 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Selection or learning and imitation are unlikely explanations. X-linked epigenetic inheritance via spermatozoa seemed to be plausible, with the transmission, limited to being through the father, possibly explained by the sex differences in meiosis. The shock of change in food availability seems to give specific transgenerational responses.</abstract><cop>England</cop><pub>BioMed Central</pub><pmid>24552514</pmid><doi>10.1186/1471-2156-15-12</doi><tpages>1</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects 19th century
Adults
Cardiovascular
Cardiovascular disease
Cardiovascular Diseases - genetics
Cardiovascular Diseases - mortality
Cardiovascular mortality
Crop diseases
Diet
Embryos
Environmental shock
Epidemiology
Families & family life
Female
Fetuses
Food
Food change
Food Supply - statistics & numerical data
Grandparents
Human transgenerational response
Humans
Inheritance Patterns
Inheritances
Literacy
Male
Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
Mortality
Nutrition
Nutritional Status - genetics
Overkalix
Parents & parenting
Pedigree
Sex Factors
Sweden - epidemiology
title Change in paternal grandmothers' early food supply influenced cardiovascular mortality of the female grandchildren
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