2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2017.11.006
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Why is parental lifespan linked to children's chances of reaching a high age? A transgenerational hypothesis

Abstract: PurposeTransgenerational determinants of longevity are poorly understood. We used data from four linked generations (G0, G1, G2 and G3) of the Uppsala Birth Cohort Multigeneration Study to address this issue.MethodsMortality in G1 (N = 9565) was followed from 1961–2015 and analysed in relation to tertiles of their parents’ (G0) age-at-death using Cox regression. Parental social class and marital status were adjusted for in the analyses, as was G1’s birth order and adult social class. For an almost entirely dec… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 62 publications
(83 reference statements)
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“…Consistent with this, autoimmune disorders with modest heritability and shared environmental risk factors often recur across generations. [126,127] An implication of this model is that the positive correlation between parental and offspring lifespans in humans partly reflect trans-generational epigenetic inheritance, in line with previous observations, [128,129] and findings in other species. [130] Compared to previous generation(s), the recurring physiological or immune response of descendant holobionts can be either attenuated or exacerbated depending on the level of mismatch between the host genes (half of which are inherited from the mother and half from the father) and the environment (which may be relatively constant or vary between generations).…”
Section: From Dietary Changes To Adaptation Through Diseasesupporting
confidence: 86%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Consistent with this, autoimmune disorders with modest heritability and shared environmental risk factors often recur across generations. [126,127] An implication of this model is that the positive correlation between parental and offspring lifespans in humans partly reflect trans-generational epigenetic inheritance, in line with previous observations, [128,129] and findings in other species. [130] Compared to previous generation(s), the recurring physiological or immune response of descendant holobionts can be either attenuated or exacerbated depending on the level of mismatch between the host genes (half of which are inherited from the mother and half from the father) and the environment (which may be relatively constant or vary between generations).…”
Section: From Dietary Changes To Adaptation Through Diseasesupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Consistent with this, autoimmune disorders with modest heritability and shared environmental risk factors often recur across generations. [ 126,127 ] An implication of this model is that the positive correlation between parental and offspring lifespans in humans partly reflect trans ‐generational epigenetic inheritance, in line with previous observations, [ 128,129 ] and findings in other species. [ 130 ]…”
Section: From Dietary Changes To Adaptation Through Diseasesupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Figure 1 illustrates the three linked generations, and the number of members in each generation in this particular study. The multigenerational data base is suitable for our purpose 48 , 49 . The statistical power to detect effects of the same size as those reported from the Överkalix cohorts is reported in Supplementary Table 7 .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Secondly, we considered social confounding: Social continuity in advantage/disadvantage across generations, partly driven by family influences on children’s and grandchildren’s education and health, is a well-known phenomenon in the sociological literature 49 , 50 . The early social and family environment does indeed predict health in successive generations in the Uppsala Multigeneration Study database 49 , 51 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Their children who survived until the Census of 1960 could be followed-up and constitute generation 2 (G2, born 1932‒1990). The grandparental generation, denoted as generation 0 (G0, born 1851‒1914), was manually traced back from generation 1 by means of parish registers, hospital archives and the Swedish Death Index (6th edition compiled by genealogists and Statistics Sweden) 35 , 51 . We included only G2 and G1 men and women for whom there was information about two or more G0 ancestors, maternal or paternal.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%