Denic Srdjan, Agarwal Mukesh M
Department of Medicine, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, United Arab Emirates University, PO Box 17666, Al Ain, Abu Dhabi, UAE.
Department of Pathology, California University of Science and Medicine, 217 E Club Center Drive, San Bernardino, CA, 92408, USA.
BMC Med Genet. 2017 Nov 21;18(1):136. doi: 10.1186/s12881-017-0498-0.
Human inbreeding generally reduces breast cancer risk (BCR). When the parents are biologically related, their infants have a lower birth weight due to smaller body organs. The undersized breasts, because of fewer mammary stem cells, have a lower likelihood of malignant conversion. Fetal growth is regulated by genomically imprinted genes which are in conflict; they promote growth when derived from the father and suppress growth when derived from the mother. The kinship theory explicates that the intensity of conflict between these genes affects growth and therefore the size of the newborn. In descendants of closely related parents, this gene clash is less resulting in a smaller infant. In this review, we elucidate the different mechanisms by which human inbreeding affects BCR, and why this risk is dissimilar in different inbred populations.
人类近亲繁殖通常会降低患乳腺癌风险(BCR)。当父母存在血缘关系时,由于身体器官较小,他们的婴儿出生体重较低。乳房尺寸过小是因为乳腺干细胞较少,发生恶性转化的可能性也较低。胎儿生长受基因组印记基因调控,这些基因存在冲突;当来自父亲时促进生长,来自母亲时则抑制生长。亲属关系理论解释说,这些基因之间冲突的强度会影响生长,进而影响新生儿的体型。在近亲父母的后代中,这种基因冲突较少,导致婴儿体型较小。在这篇综述中,我们阐明了人类近亲繁殖影响BCR的不同机制,以及为什么这种风险在不同的近亲繁殖人群中有所不同。