Groeger J, Opler M, Kleinhaus K, Perrin M C, Calderon-Margalit R, Manor O, Paltiel O, Conley D, Harlap S, Malaspina D
College of Medicine, SUNY Downstate, Brooklyn, New York, 11203.
Department of Psychiatry, New York University School of Medicine, 1 Park Avenue, Floor 8, New York, New York, 10016, USA.
Am J Hum Biol. 2017 May 6;29(3). doi: 10.1002/ajhb.22945. Epub 2016 Nov 30.
To examine whether ancestry influenced sex ratios of offspring in a birth cohort before parental antenatal sex selection influenced offspring sex.
We measured the sex ratio as the percent of males according to countries of birth of paternal and maternal grandfathers in 91,459 live births from 1964 to 1976 in the Jerusalem Perinatal Study. Confidence limits (CI) were computed based on an expected sex ratio of 1.05, which is 51.4% male.
Of all live births recorded, 51.4% were male. Relative to Jewish ancestry (51.4% males), significantly more males (1,761) were born to Muslim ancestry (54.5, 95% CI = 52.1-56.8, P = 0.01). Among the former, sex ratios were not significantly associated with paternal or maternal age, education, or offspring's birth order. Consistent with a preference for male offspring, the sex ratio decreased despite increasing numbers of births over the 13-year period. Sex ratios were not affected by maternal or paternal origins in North Africa or Europe. However, the offspring whose paternal grandfathers were born in Western Asia included fewer males than expected (50.7, 50.1-51.3, P = 0.02), whether the father was born abroad (50.7) or in Israel (50.8). This was observed for descendents of paternal grandfathers born in Lebanon (47.6), Turkey (49.9), Yemen & Aden (50.2), Iraq (50.5), Afghanistan (50.5), Syria (50.6), and Cyprus (50.7); but not for those from India (51.5) or Iran (51.9). The West Asian group showed the strongest decline in sex ratios with increasing paternal family size.
A decreased sex ratio associated with ancestry in Western Asia is consistent with reduced ability to bear sons by a subset of Jewish men in the Jerusalem cohort. Lower sex ratios may be because of pregnancy stress, which may be higher in this subgroup. Alternatively, a degrading Y chromosome haplogroup or other genetic or epigenetic differences on male germ lines could affect birth ratios, such as differential exposure to an environmental agent, dietary differences, or stress. Differential stopping behaviors that favor additional pregnancies following the birth of a daughter might exacerbate these lower sex ratios.
在父母产前性别选择影响后代性别之前,研究血统是否会影响出生队列中后代的性别比例。
在耶路撒冷围产期研究中,我们根据1964年至1976年91459例活产中祖父和外祖父的出生国家来计算性别比例,以男性所占百分比表示。基于预期性别比例1.05(即男性占51.4%)计算置信区间(CI)。
在所有记录的活产中,51.4%为男性。相对于犹太血统(男性占51.4%),穆斯林血统出生的男性明显更多(1761例,占54.5%,95%CI = 52.1 - 56.8,P = 0.01)。在犹太血统中,性别比例与父亲或母亲的年龄、教育程度或后代的出生顺序无显著关联。与偏爱男性后代一致,尽管在这13年期间出生人数增加,但性别比例仍有所下降。性别比例不受北非或欧洲的母亲或父亲出身的影响。然而,祖父出生在西亚的后代中男性人数少于预期(50.7%,50.1 - 51.3,P = 0.02),无论父亲是在国外出生(50.7%)还是在以色列出生(50.8%)。在祖父出生于黎巴嫩(47.6%)、土耳其(49.9%)、也门和亚丁(50.2%)、伊拉克(50.5%)、阿富汗(50.5%)、叙利亚(50.6%)和塞浦路斯(50.7%)的后代中观察到这种情况;但在来自印度(51.5%)或伊朗(51.9%)的后代中未观察到。西亚群体的性别比例随着父亲家庭规模的增加下降最为明显。
与西亚血统相关的性别比例下降与耶路撒冷队列中一部分犹太男性生育儿子能力降低一致。较低的性别比例可能是由于怀孕压力,该亚组的压力可能更高。或者,Y染色体单倍群的退化或雄性生殖系上的其他遗传或表观遗传差异可能影响出生比例,如对环境因素的不同暴露、饮食差异或压力。女儿出生后倾向于再次怀孕的不同生育停止行为可能会加剧这些较低的性别比例。