2013
DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.12136
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Transgenerational effects of prenatal exposure to the 1944–45 Dutch famine

Abstract: Objective We previously showed that maternal under-nutrition during gestation is associated with increased metabolic and cardiovascular disease in the offspring. Also, we found increased neonatal adiposity among the grandchildren of women who had been undernourished during pregnancy. In the present study we investigated whether these transgenerational effects have led to altered body composition and poorer health in adulthood in the grandchildren.Design Historical cohort study.Setting Web-based questionnaire.P… Show more

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Cited by 393 publications
(248 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
(33 reference statements)
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“…Additionally, under-nourished males may have low sperm counts, poor sperm quality (Dunn and Moss, 1992;Izquierdo et al, 2001;Guan et al, 2014), or lower resistance to disease (Moret and SchmidHempel, 2000). Pheromones revealing information about male nutritional health may also be significant for females: recent studies link paternal nutritional health at conception to offspring health (Veenendaal et al, 2013) and fertility (McPherson et al, 2014), effects that may be trans-generational (see also Lane et al, 2015).…”
Section: Diet-mediated Pheromones and Signaller Quality Via Direct Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, under-nourished males may have low sperm counts, poor sperm quality (Dunn and Moss, 1992;Izquierdo et al, 2001;Guan et al, 2014), or lower resistance to disease (Moret and SchmidHempel, 2000). Pheromones revealing information about male nutritional health may also be significant for females: recent studies link paternal nutritional health at conception to offspring health (Veenendaal et al, 2013) and fertility (McPherson et al, 2014), effects that may be trans-generational (see also Lane et al, 2015).…”
Section: Diet-mediated Pheromones and Signaller Quality Via Direct Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the earliest stages of life, the genome undergoes radical changes in epigenetic marks, which are characterized by waves of demethylation of DNA followed by remethylation (Reik et al 2001). These imprinting patterns, if not erased after fertilization, may become stable and persist to the next generations of experimental animals (Zambrano et al 2005, Pinheiro et al 2008) and even of humans (Veenendaal et al 2013). This can be reversed by the changes in lifestyle (Gallou-Kabani & Junien 2005).…”
Section: Epigenetic Mechanismsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, follow-up studies on the Dutch Hunger Winter showed that the offspring of women who had been exposed to famine in utero had increased neonatal adiposity. Furthermore, the offspring of men who were underfed in utero were more obese than those from a control population (14,22,23) . Nominally, the offspring of men and women exposed to intrauterine malnutrition constitute the second-generation offspring; the inheritance of environmentally induced phenotypes by the following generation is referred to as transgenerational effects.…”
Section: Proceedings Of the Nutrition Societymentioning
confidence: 88%