Pomeroy Emma, Wells Jonathan C K, Cole Tim J, O'Callaghan Michael, Stock Jay T
Newnham College, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Division of Biological Anthropology, Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2015 Apr;156(4):625-36. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22680. Epub 2014 Dec 13.
The patterns of association between maternal or paternal and neonatal phenotype may offer insight into how neonatal characteristics are shaped by evolutionary processes, such as conflicting parental interests in fetal investment and obstetric constraints. Paternal interests are theoretically served by maximizing fetal growth, and maternal interests by managing investment in current and future offspring, but whether paternal and maternal influences act on different components of overall size is unknown. We tested whether parents' prepregnancy height and body mass index (BMI) were related to neonatal anthropometry (birthweight, head circumference, absolute and proportional limb segment and trunk lengths, subcutaneous fat) among 1,041 Australian neonates using stepwise linear regression. Maternal and paternal height and maternal BMI were associated with birthweight. Paternal height related to offspring forearm and lower leg lengths, maternal height and BMI to neonatal head circumference, and maternal BMI to offspring adiposity. Principal components analysis identified three components of variability reflecting neonatal "head and trunk skeletal size," "adiposity," and "limb lengths." Regression analyses of the component scores supported the associations of head and trunk size or adiposity with maternal anthropometry, and limb lengths with paternal anthropometry. Our results suggest that while neonatal fatness reflects environmental conditions (maternal physiology), head circumference and limb and trunk lengths show differing associations with parental anthropometry. These patterns may reflect genetics, parental imprinting and environmental influences in a manner consistent with parental conflicts of interest. Paternal height may relate to neonatal limb length as a means of increasing fetal growth without exacerbating the risk of obstetric complications.
母亲或父亲与新生儿表型之间的关联模式,可能有助于深入了解新生儿特征是如何由进化过程塑造的,比如父母在胎儿投资方面的利益冲突以及产科限制。从理论上讲,父亲的利益通过使胎儿生长最大化来实现,而母亲的利益则通过管理对当前和未来后代的投资来实现,但父亲和母亲的影响是否作用于总体大小的不同组成部分尚不清楚。我们使用逐步线性回归,对1041名澳大利亚新生儿进行了测试,以探究父母孕前身高和体重指数(BMI)是否与新生儿人体测量学指标(出生体重、头围、四肢和躯干的绝对长度与比例长度、皮下脂肪)相关。母亲和父亲的身高以及母亲的BMI与出生体重相关。父亲的身高与后代的前臂和小腿长度有关,母亲的身高和BMI与新生儿头围有关,母亲的BMI与后代肥胖有关。主成分分析确定了三个变异成分,分别反映新生儿的“头部和躯干骨骼大小”、“肥胖程度”和 “肢体长度”。对成分得分的回归分析支持了头部和躯干大小或肥胖程度与母亲人体测量学指标之间的关联,以及肢体长度与父亲人体测量学指标之间的关联。我们的研究结果表明,虽然新生儿的肥胖反映了环境状况(母亲的生理状况),但头围以及肢体和躯干长度与父母人体测量学指标的关联有所不同。这些模式可能以一种与父母利益冲突相一致的方式反映了遗传、父母印记和环境影响。父亲的身高可能与新生儿肢体长度有关,这是一种在不增加产科并发症风险的情况下增加胎儿生长的方式。