4.7 Article

Multigenerational cohorts in patients with asthma and allergy

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 139, Issue 2, Pages 415-421

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2016.12.002

Keywords

Cohort; multigenerational; epigenetics; asthma; allergy; DNA methylation

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health USA [R01 HL082925, R01 AI091905, R01 AI121226, R01 HL132321, R01AI121226, R01AI091905, 1R01HL132321]
  2. Asthma UK [364]
  3. Ageing Lungs in European Cohorts Study
  4. European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme [633212.]

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Recent observations that disease risk can be transmitted across generations without the need for direct exposure of the child to the index environmental insult has sparked interest in transgenerational inheritance. Epigenetics describes processes that modify gene expression without a change in the nucleotide sequence. Epigenetic processes can be induced in response to environmental exposures, can influence disease risk, and might explain these multigenerational effects. In experimental models a number of epigenetic mechanisms have been identified that could mediate vertical transmission of epigenetic inheritance. However, relevance of these findings to human disease is not yet clear. An alternative model is one in which transgenerational inheritance of disease risk requires the presence of exposurerelated diseases in the mother during pregnancy (termed induced epigenetic transmission model). A number of crosssectional studies have investigated multigenerational effects in allergy and asthma. However, given the early-life origins of asthma and allergy, birth cohort studies are ideal to investigate the effect of genetic predisposition, epigenetics, and environmental exposures, avoiding pitfalls, such as recall bias and confounding by ongoing exposures, disease, and treatment. The well-characterized 3 generations of the Isle of Wight cohort include 2 consecutive birth cohorts, providing longitudinal data that can be studied for epigenetic transfer of information, such as the effect of grand parental smoking or exposure to other toxic compounds. Further large multigenerational birth cohorts are needed to establish the clinical relevance of this phenomenon and differentiate between vertical and induced transmission models, which might influence future preventive strategies.

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