Developmental Programming: Priming Disease Susceptibility for Subsequent Generations
详细信息    查看全文
  • 作者:L. C. Messer ; J. Boone-Heinonen ; L. Mponwane ; L. Wallack…
  • 关键词:Developmental programming ; Health disparities ; Social epidemiology ; Priming ; Air pollutants ; Psychosocial stress ; Diet
  • 刊名:Current Epidemiology Reports
  • 出版年:2015
  • 出版时间:March 2015
  • 年:2015
  • 卷:2
  • 期:1
  • 页码:37-51
  • 全文大小:513KB
  • 参考文献:Papers of particular interest, published recently, have been highlighted as: 鈥⑩€?Of major importance 鈥?Of importance1.Bayman E, Drake A, Piyasena C. Prematurity and programming of cardiovascular disease risk: a future challenge for public health? Archives of disease in childhood. Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2014;99(6):F510鈥?.CrossRef
    2.Wells J. Adaptive variability in the duration of critical windows of plasticity: implications for the programming of obesity. Evol Med Pub Health. 2014;2014(1):109鈥?1.CrossRef
    3.Alexander B, Henry Dasinger J, Intapad S. Effect of Low birth weight on women鈥檚 health. Clin Ther. 2014;S0149-2918(14):00390鈥?.
    4.Kuzawa C, Sweet E. Epigenetics and the embodiment of race: developmental origins of US racial disparities in cardiovascular health. Am J Hum Biol. 2009;21(1):2鈥?5.PubMed CrossRef
    5.Silva L et al. Mother鈥檚 educational level and fetal growth: the genesis of health inequalities. Int J Epidemiol. 2010;39(5):1250鈥?1.PubMed CrossRef
    6.Jasienska G. Low birth weight of contemporary African Americans: an intergenerational effect of slavery? Am J Hum Biol. 2009;21(1):16鈥?4.PubMed CrossRef
    7.Thayer ZM, Kuzawa C. Biological memories of past environments: epigenetic pathways to health disparities. Epigenetics. 2011;6(7):798鈥?03.PubMed CrossRef
    8.Thornburg KL et al. In utero life and epigenetic predisposition for disease. Adv Genet. 2010;71:57鈥?8.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    9.Thornburg K, O鈥橳ierney P, Louey S. Review: the placenta is a programming agent for cardiovascular disease. Placenta, 2010(31 Suppl): p. S54鈥揝59.
    10.Wright R, Brunst K. Programming of respiratory health in childhood: influence of outdoor air pollution. Curr Opin Pediatr. 2013;25(2):232鈥?.PubMed CrossRef
    11.Rauh V et al. Neonatology and the environment: impact of early exposure to airborne environmental toxicants on infant and child neurodevelopment. Neoreviews. 2010;11:363鈥?.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    12.Entringer S et al. Fetal programming of body composition, obesity, and metabolic function: the role of intrauterine stress and stress biology. J Nutr Metab. 2012;2012:632548.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    13.Brunton P. Resetting the dynamic range of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis stress responses through pregnancy. J Neuroendocrinol. 2010;22(11):1198鈥?13.PubMed CrossRef
    14.Dabelea D, Crume T. Maternal environment and the transgenerational cycle of obesity and diabetes. Diabetes. 2011;60(7):1849鈥?5.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    15.Ainge H et al. A systematic review on animal models of maternal high fat feeding and offspring glycaemic control. Int J Obes. 2011;35(3):325鈥?5.CrossRef
    16.Gluckman P et al. Effect of in utero and early-life conditions on adult health and disease. N Engl J Med. 2008;359(1):61鈥?3.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    17.Burdge G, Lillycrop K. Nutrition, epigenetics, and developmental plasticity: implications for understanding human disease. Annu Rev Nutr. 2010;30:315鈥?9.PubMed CrossRef
    18.Geronimus A. The weathering hypothesis and the health of African-American women and infants: evidence and speculations. Ethn Dis. 1992;2:207鈥?1.PubMed
    19.McMillen I, Robinson J. Developmental origins of the metabolic syndrome: prediction, plasticity, and programming. Physiol Rev. 2005;85(2):571鈥?33.PubMed CrossRef
    20.Gee G, Payne-Sturges D. Environmental health disparities: a framework integrating psychosocial and environmental concepts. Environ Health Perspect. 2004;112(17):1645鈥?3.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    21.O鈥橬eill M et al. Health, wealth, and air pollution: advancing theory and methods. Environ Health Perspect. 2003;111(16):1861鈥?0.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    22.Jerrett M, et al. What GIS tells us about environmental and public health. 2009.
    23.Miranda M et al. Making the environmental justice grade: the relative burden of air pollution exposure in the United States. Int J Environ Res Publ Health. 2011;8(6):1755鈥?1.CrossRef
    24.Bell M, Ebisu K. Environmental inequality in exposures to airborne particulate matter components in the United States. Environ Health Perspect. 2012;120(12):1699鈥?04.PubMed Central PubMed
    25.鈥⑩€?/div>Auten RL et al. Maternal diesel inhalation increases airway hyperreactivity in ozone-exposed offspring. Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol. 2012;46(4):454鈥?0. This paper demonstrates how prenatal exposure primes for an exaggerated response to postnatal exposure.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    26.Auten RL et al. Maternal exposure to particulate matter increases postnatal ozone-induced airway hyperreactivity in juvenile mice. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2009;180(12):1218鈥?6.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    27.Perera FP et al. Prenatal airborne polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon exposure and child IQ at age 5聽years. Pediatrics. 2009;124(2):e195鈥?02.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    28.Montgomery S, Ekbom A. Smoking during pregnancy and diabetes mellitus in a British longitudinal birth cohort. Br Med J. 2002;324(7328):26鈥?.CrossRef
    29.Djuric Z et al. Biomarkers of psychological stress in health disparities research. Open Biomark J. 2008;1:7鈥?9.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    30.Reynolds R. Glucocorticoid excess and the developmental origins of disease: two decades of testing the hypothesis鈥?012 Curt Richter Award Winner. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2013;38(1):1鈥?1.PubMed CrossRef
    31.Pascuan CG et al. Prenatal stress induces up-regulation of glucocorticoid receptors on lymphoid cells modifying the T-cell response after acute stress exposure in the adult life. Physiol Behav. 2014;128:141鈥?.PubMed CrossRef
    32.Xu L et al. Prenatal restraint stress is associated with demethylation of corticotrophin releasing hormone (CRH) promoter and enhances CRH transcriptional responses to stress in adolescent rats. Neurochem Res. 2014;39(7):1193鈥?.PubMed CrossRef
    33.鈥⑩€?/div>Van den Hove DL et al. Prenatal stress and subsequent exposure to chronic mild stress in rats; interdependent effects on emotional behavior and the serotonergic system. Eur Neuropsychopharmacol. 2014;24(4):595鈥?07. This paper is important because it demonstrates how responses to developmental stress exposures depend on later life environmental conditions; this suggests modifying later life environments may help overcome early life adverse exposures.PubMed CrossRef
    34.Schopper H et al. Effects of prenatal stress on hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function over two generations of guinea pigs (Cavia aperea f. porcellus). Gen Comp Endocrinol. 2012;176(1):18鈥?7.PubMed CrossRef
    35.Entringer S et al. Influence of prenatal psychosocial stress on cytokine production in adult women. Dev Psychobiol. 2008;50(6):579鈥?7.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    36.Thompson F et al. Interrelationships of added sugars intake, socioeconomic status, and race/ethnicity in adults in the United States: National Health Interview Survey, 2005. J Am Diet Assoc. 2009;109(8):1376鈥?3.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    37.Kirkpatrick S et al. Income and race/ethnicity are associated with adherence to food-based dietary guidance among US adults and children. J Acad Nutr Diet. 2012;112(5):624鈥?5.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    38.Bruce K et al. Maternal high-fat feeding primes steatohepatitis in adult mice offspring, involving mitochondrial dysfunction and altered lipogenesis gene expression. Hepatology. 2009;50(6):1796鈥?08.PubMed CrossRef
    39.鈥⑩€?/div>Fan L et al. Maternal high-fat diet impacts endothelial function in nonhuman primate offspring. Int J Obes. 2013;37(2):254鈥?2. This paper is reports results for non-human primates (closest to humans) and provides a nice study design.CrossRef
    40.Zhang Z et al. Supplementation of the maternal diet during pregnancy with chocolate and fructose interacts with the high-fat diet of the young to facilitate the onset of metabolic disorders in rat offspring. Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol. 2013;40(9):652鈥?1.PubMed CrossRef
    41.Pruis M et al. Maternal western diet primes non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in adult mouse offspring. Acta Physiol (Oxf). 2014;210(1):215鈥?7.CrossRef
    42.Bayol S et al. A maternal 鈥渏unk food鈥?diet in pregnancy and lactation promotes nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in rat offspring. Endocrinology. 2010;151(4):1451鈥?1.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    43.Chen H, Simar D, Morris M. Hypothalamic neuroendocrine circuitry is programmed by maternal obesity: interaction with postnatal nutritional environment. PLoS ONE. 2009;4(7):e6259.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    44.Khanal P, et al. Late gestation under- and overnutrition have differential impacts when combined with a postnatal obesogenic diet on glucose-lactate-insulin adaptations during metabolic challenges in adolescent sheep. Acta Physiologica (Oxf), 2014.
    45.Mitra A et al. Effect of high-fat diet during gestation, lactation, or postweaning on physiological and behavioral indexes in borderline hypertensive rats. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2009;296(1):R20鈥?.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    46.Shankar K et al. Maternal obesity at conception programs obesity in the offspring. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2008;294(2):R528鈥?8.PubMed CrossRef
    47.Page K et al. Maternal and postweaning diet interaction alters hypothalamic gene expression and modulates response to a high-fat diet in male offspring. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2009;297(4):R1049鈥?7.PubMed CrossRef
    48.Catalano P et al. Fetuses of obese mothers develop insulin resistance in utero. Diabetes Care. 2009;32(6):1076鈥?0.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    49.Grove K et al. Development of metabolic systems. Physiol Behav. 2005;86(5):646鈥?0.PubMed CrossRef
    50.Samuelsson A et al. Diet-induced obesity in female mice leads to offspring hyperphagia, adiposity, hypertension, and insulin resistance: a novel murine model of developmental programming. Hypertension. 2008;51(2):383鈥?2.PubMed CrossRef
    51.Borengasser S et al. High fat diet and in utero exposure to maternal obesity disrupts circadian rhythm and leads to metabolic programming of liver in rat offspring. PLoS ONE. 2014;9(1):e84209.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    52.Ma J et al. High-fat maternal diet during pregnancy persistently alters the offspring microbiome in a primate model. Nat Commun. 2014;5:3889.PubMed Central PubMed
    53.King V et al. Post-weaning diet determines metabolic risk in mice exposed to overnutrition in early life. Reprod Biol Endocrinol. 2014;12:73.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    54.White C, Purpera M, Morrison C. Maternal obesity is necessary for programming effect of high-fat diet on offspring. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2009;296(5):R1464鈥?2.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    55.Couvreur O et al. Unexpected long-term protection of adult offspring born to high-fat fed dams against obesity induced by a sucrose-rich diet. PLoS ONE. 2011;6(3):e18043.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    56.Fereaou-Viala J et al. Long-term consequences of maternal high-fat feeding on hypothalamic leptin sensitivity and diet-induced obesity in the offspring. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2007;293(3):R1056鈥?2.CrossRef
    57.Wei J et al. Perinatal exposure to bisphenol A exacerbates nonalcoholic steatohepatitis-like phenotype in male rat offspring fed on a high-fat diet. J Endocrinol. 2014;222(3):313鈥?5.PubMed CrossRef
    58.鈥⑩€?/div>Bolton JL, Auten RL, Bilbo SD. Prenatal air pollution exposure induces sexually dimorphic fetal programming of metabolic and neuroinflammatory outcomes in adult offspring. Brain Behav Immun. 2014;37:30鈥?4. This paper is useful in providing mixed domain prenatal (air) and postnatal (diet) exposures, which better replicates the human experience. It also demonstrated sexually-dimorphic effects, which is what we might expect.PubMed CrossRef
    59.Bolton JL et al. Prenatal air pollution exposure induces neuroinflammation and predisposes offspring to weight gain in adulthood in a sex-specific manner. FASEB J. 2012;26(11):4743鈥?4.PubMed CrossRef
    60.鈥?/div>Tamashiro K et al. Prenatal stress or high-fat diet increases susceptibility to diet-induced obesity in rat offspring. Diabetes. 2009;58(5):1116鈥?5. This paper was especially useful in its consideration of stress-diet exposures, which are central to the current developmental origins of health and disease hypotheses.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    61.Cooper R. Race in biological and biomedical research. Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine. 2013. 3(11).
    62.Kaufman J, Rushani D, Cooper R. Nature versus nurture in the explanations for racial/ethnic health disparities: parsing disparities in the era of genome-wide association studies, in reconsidering race: global and comparative studies in race and genomics, K. Suzuki and D. von Vacano, Editors. 2015, Oxford University Press: London.
    63.Soobader M et al. Levels of analysis for the study of environmental health disparities. Environ Res. 2006;102(2):172鈥?0.PubMed CrossRef
    64.Norton J et al. Race, wealth, and solid waste facilities in North Carolina. Environ Health Perspect. 2007;115(9):1344鈥?0.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    65.Jones MR et al. Race/ethnicity, residential segregation, and exposure to ambient air pollution: the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA). Am J Public Health. 2014;104(11):2130鈥?.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    66.Kariisa M et al. Differential ambient air pollution exposure in a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease cohort: the role of area-level socioeconomic factors. Environ Justice. 2014;7(1):18鈥?6.CrossRef
    67.Laraia B et al. Neighborhood factors associated with physical activity and adequacy of weight gain during pregnancy. J Urban Health. 2007;84(6):793鈥?06.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    68.Laraia BA, et al. Direct observation of neighbourhood attributes in an urban area of the U.S. south. International Journal of Health Geographics. 2006. 5(11): p. online.
    69.Miranda M, Messer L, Kroger G. The impact of neighborhood quality on pregnancy outcomes. Environ Health Perspect. 2011;12(3):471鈥?.CrossRef
    70.Sampson R, Raudenbush S. Seeing disorder: neighborhood stigma and the social construction of 鈥渂roken windows鈥? Soc Psychol Q. 2004;67(4):319鈥?2.CrossRef
    71.LaVeist T, Wallace JJ. Health risk and inequitable distribution of liquor stores in African American neighborhood. Soc Sci Med. 2000;54(4):613鈥?.CrossRef
    72.Romley J et al. Alcohol and environmental justice: the density of liquor stores and bars in urban neighborhoods in the United States. J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2007;68(1):48鈥?5.PubMed
    73.Powell L, Chaloupka F, Bao Y. The availability of fast-food and full-service restaurants in the United States: associations with neighborhood characteristics. Am J Prev Med. 2007;33(4 Suppl):S240鈥?.PubMed CrossRef
    74.Baker E et al. The role of race and poverty in access to foods that enable individuals to adhere to dietary guidelines. Prev Chronic Dis. 2006;3(3):A76.PubMed Central PubMed
    75.Larson N, Story M, Nelson M. Neighborhood environments: disparities in access to healthy foods in the US. Am J Prev Med. 2009;36(1):74鈥?1.PubMed CrossRef
    76.Richardson A et al. Are neighbourhood food resources distributed inequitably by income and race in the USA? Br Med J Open. 2012;2(2):e000698.
    77.Powell L et al. Availability of physical activity-related facilities and neighborhood demographic and socioeconomic characteristics: a national study. Am J Public Health. 2006;96(9):1676鈥?0.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    78.Wolch J, Wilson J, Fehrenbach J. Parks and park funding in Los Angeles: an equity-mapping analysis. Urban Geogr. 2005;26(1):4鈥?5.CrossRef
    79.Moore L et al. Availability of recreational resources in minority and low socioeconomic status areas. Am J Prev Med. 2008;34(1):16鈥?2.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    80.Dubowitz T et al. Neighborhood socioeconomic status and fruit and vegetable intake among whites, blacks, and Mexican Americans in the United States. Am J Prev Med. 2008;87(6):1883鈥?1.
    81.Ford P, Dzewaltowski D. Disparities in obesity prevalence due to variation in the retail food environment: three testable hypotheses. Nutr Rev. 2008;66(4):216鈥?8.PubMed CrossRef
    82.Lovasi G et al. Built environments and obesity in disadvantaged populations. Epidemiol Rev. 2009;31:7鈥?0.PubMed CrossRef
    83.Gouda M. The long-term effect of slavery on violent crime: evidence from U.S. counties. Available at SSRN 2358389. 2013.
    84.Joe J. Out of harmony: health problems and young native American men. J Am Coll Heal. 2001;49(5):237鈥?2.CrossRef
    85.Gee G. A multilevel analysis of the relationship between institutional and individual racial discrimination and health status. Am J Public Health. 2002;92(4):615鈥?3.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    86.Pasco E, LS R. Perceived discrimination and health: a meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin. 2009. 135 (4).
    87.Williams D, Mohammed S. Discrimination and racial disparities in health: evidence and research needed. J Behav Med. 2009;32(1):20鈥?7.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    88.Harper C, Marcus R, Moore K. Enduring poverty and the conditions of childhood: life course and intergenerational poverty transmissions. World Dev. 2003;31(3):535鈥?4.CrossRef
    89.Moore K. Thinking about youth poverty through the lenses of chronic poverty, life-course poverty and intergenerational poverty. 2005: Chronic Poverty Research Centre (CPRC)
    90.Draxten M et al. Parental role modeling of fruits and vegetables at meals and snacks is associated with children鈥檚 adequate consumption. Appetite. 2014;78:1鈥?.PubMed CrossRef
    91.Appleton A et al. Patterning in placental 11-B hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase methylation according to prenatal socioeconomic adversity. PLoS ONE. 2014;8(9):e74691.CrossRef
    92.Tehranifar P et al. Early life socioeconomic factors and genomic DNA methylation in mid-life. Epigenetics. 2013;8(1):23鈥?.PubMed Central PubMed CrossRef
    93.Br酶ns C et al. Effects of high-fat overfeeding on mitochondrial function, glucose and fat metabolism, and adipokine levels in low-birth-weight subjects. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2012;302(1):E43鈥?1.PubMed CrossRef
    94.VanderWeele T. A unification of mediation and interaction鈥攁 4-way decomposition. Epidemiology. 2014;25(5):749鈥?1.PubMed CrossRef
    95.Kline R. Principles and practice of structural equation modeling. 2nd ed. New York: The Guilford Press; 2005.
    96.Hammond R. Complex systems modeling for obesity research. Prev Chronic Dis. 2009;6(3):A97.PubMed Central PubMed
    97.Rose G. Sick individuals and sick populations. Int J Epidemiol. 1985;14(1):32鈥?.PubMed CrossRef
    98.Swinburn B et al. The global obesity pandemic: shaped by global drivers and local environments. Lancet. 2011;378:804鈥?4.PubMed CrossRef
    99.Guilarte T et al. Environmental enrichment reverses cognitive and molecular deficits induced by developmental lead exposure. Ann Neurol. 2003;53(1):50鈥?.PubMed CrossRef
  • 作者单位:L. C. Messer (1)
    J. Boone-Heinonen (2)
    L. Mponwane (1)
    L. Wallack (1)
    K. L. Thornburg (3)

    1. School of Community Health, College of Urban and Public Affairs, Portland State University, Portland, OR, USA
    2. Department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA
    3. Moore Institute, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA
  • 刊物类别:Epidemiology;
  • 刊物主题:Epidemiology;
  • 出版者:Springer International Publishing
  • ISSN:2196-2995
文摘
Racial and/or ethnic minorities carry the highest burden of many adverse health outcomes intergenerationally. We propose a paradigm in which developmental programming exacerbates the effects of racial patterning of adverse environmental conditions, thereby contributing to health disparity persistence. Evidence that developmental programming induces a heightened response to adverse exposures (鈥渟econd hits鈥? encountered later in life is considered. We evaluated the evidence for the second hit phenomenon reported in animal and human studies from three domains (air, stress, nutrition). Original research including a gestational exposure and a childhood or adulthood second hit exposure was reviewed. Evidence from animal studies suggest that prenatal exposure to air pollutants is associated with an exaggerated reaction to postnatal air pollution exposure, which results in worse health outcomes. It also indicates offspring exposed to prenatal maternal stress produce an exaggerated response to subsequent stressors, including anxiety and hyper-responsiveness of the hypothalamic鈥損ituitary鈥揳drenal axis. Similarly, prenatal and postnatal Western-style diets induce synergistic effects on weight gain, metabolic dysfunction, and atherosclerotic risk. Cross-domain second hits (e.g., gestational air pollution followed by childhood stressor) were also considered. Suboptimal gestational environments induce exaggerated offspring responses to subsequent environmental and social exposures. These developmental programming effects may result in enhanced sensitivity of ongoing, racially patterned, adverse exposures in race/ethnic minorities, thereby exacerbating health disparities from one generation to the next. Empirical assessment of the hypothesized role of priming processes in the propagation of health disparities is needed. Future social epidemiology research must explicitly consider synergistic relationships among social environmental conditions to which gestating females are exposed and offspring exposures when assessing causes for persistent health disparities. Keywords Developmental programming Health disparities Social epidemiology Priming Air pollutants Psychosocial stress Diet

© 2004-2018 中国地质图书馆版权所有 京ICP备05064691号 京公网安备11010802017129号

地址:北京市海淀区学院路29号 邮编:100083

电话:办公室:(+86 10)66554848;文献借阅、咨询服务、科技查新:66554700