Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA.
Institute for Policy Research Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA.
Evol Anthropol. 2020 Jul;29(4):180-200. doi: 10.1002/evan.21828. Epub 2020 Mar 20.
Recently, novel experimental approaches and molecular techniques have demonstrated that a male's experiences can be transmitted through his germline via epigenetic processes. These findings suggest that paternal exposures influence phenotypic variation in unexposed progeny-a proposal that runs counter to canonical ideas about inheritance developed during the 20th century. Nevertheless, support for paternal germline epigenetic inheritance (GEI) in nonhuman mammals continues to grow and the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are becoming clearer. To what extent do similar processes operate in humans, and if so, what are their implications for understanding human phenotypic variation, health, and evolution? Here, we review evidence for GEI in human and nonhuman mammals and evaluate these findings in relation to historical conceptions of heredity. Drawing on epidemiological data, reproductive biology, and molecular embryology, we outline developments and opportunities for the study of GEI in human populations, emphasizing the challenges that researchers in this area still face.
最近,新的实验方法和分子技术表明,男性的经历可以通过表观遗传过程通过他的生殖细胞传递。这些发现表明,父代暴露会影响未暴露后代的表型变异——这一观点违背了 20 世纪发展起来的关于遗传的经典观念。然而,非人类哺乳动物中父系生殖细胞表观遗传遗传(GEI)的支持仍在不断增加,并且这种现象的机制变得更加清晰。在多大程度上类似的过程在人类中起作用,如果是这样,它们对理解人类表型变异、健康和进化有什么影响?在这里,我们回顾了人类和非人类哺乳动物中 GEI 的证据,并根据遗传的历史概念评估了这些发现。我们借鉴了流行病学数据、生殖生物学和分子胚胎学,概述了在人类群体中研究 GEI 的发展和机遇,强调了该领域研究人员仍然面临的挑战。