Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Medical Sciences Building, 1 King's College Circle, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 1A8, Canada.
Exp Neurol. 2012 Jan;233(1):95-101. doi: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2011.01.009. Epub 2011 Jan 31.
It is becoming increasingly evident that maternal exposure to adversity during pregnancy leads to life-long effects in offspring. While there appears to be some commonality in the effects of maternal stress on endocrine and behavioral outcomes in the first generation offspring, it is clear that effects are highly dependent on species, sex and age, as well as on the time in pregnancy when stress is experienced. Recent studies have identified that the effects of maternal stress are not confined to the first generation and that they can extend over multiple generations. These effects are also evident in humans. While our understanding of the potential mechanisms by which transgenerational programming of the stress response occurs remain largely undetermined, recent studies have begun to identify potential mechanisms of transfer. These include modified maternal adaptations to pregnancy, altered maternal behavior and transgenerational epigenetic programming. Such transgenerational programming of stress responses and pathologies has important societal consequences as it could provide a biological explanation for the generational persistence of human behaviors in populations exposed to adversity.
越来越明显的是,母亲在怀孕期间所经历的逆境会对后代产生终身影响。虽然母体应激对第一代后代的内分泌和行为结果的影响似乎存在一些共同性,但很明显,这些影响高度依赖于物种、性别和年龄,以及应激发生在怀孕的哪个时期。最近的研究表明,母体应激的影响不仅局限于第一代,而且可以延续多代。这些影响在人类中也很明显。虽然我们对跨代应激反应编程潜在机制的理解在很大程度上还不确定,但最近的研究已经开始确定潜在的转移机制。这些机制包括对怀孕的母体适应性的改变、母体行为的改变以及跨代表观遗传编程。这种应激反应和病理的跨代编程具有重要的社会后果,因为它可以为在逆境中暴露的人群中人类行为的代际持续提供生物学解释。