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Maternal effect
Maternal effect
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A maternal effect is a situation where the phenotype of an organism is determined not only by the environment it experiences and its genotype, but also by the environment and genotype of its mother. In genetics, maternal effects occur when an organism shows the phenotype expected from the genotype of the mother, irrespective of its own genotype, often due to the mother supplying messenger RNA or proteins to the egg. Maternal effects can also be caused by the maternal environment independent of genotype, sometimes controlling the size, sex, or behaviour of the offspring. These adaptive maternal effects lead to phenotypes of offspring that increase their fitness. Further, it introduces the concept of phenotypic plasticity, an important evolutionary concept. It has been proposed that maternal effects are important for the evolution of adaptive responses to environmental heterogeneity.

In genetics

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In genetics, a maternal effect occurs when the phenotype of an organism is determined by the genotype of its mother.[1] For example, if a mutation is maternal effect recessive, then a female homozygous for the mutation may appear phenotypically normal, however her offspring will show the mutant phenotype, even if they are heterozygous for the mutation.

Maternal effect
All offspring show the wild-type phenotype All offspring show the mutant phenotype
Genetic crosses involving a maternal effect recessive mutation, m. The maternal genotype determines the phenotype of the offspring.

Maternal effects often occur because the mother supplies a particular mRNA or protein to the oocyte, hence the maternal genome determines whether the molecule is functional. Maternal supply of mRNAs to the early embryo is important, as in many organisms the embryo is initially transcriptionally inactive.[2] Because of the inheritance pattern of maternal effect mutations, special genetic screens are required to identify them. These typically involve examining the phenotype of the organisms one generation later than in a conventional (zygotic) screen, as their mothers will be potentially homozygous for maternal effect mutations that arise.[3][4]

In Drosophila early embryogenesis

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Protein and RNA are transported in particles (white dots) from the nurse cells (maternal) to the developing oocyte in Drosophila melanogaster. Scale bar shows 10 μm.

A Drosophila melanogaster oocyte develops in an egg chamber in close association with a set of cells called nurse cells. Both the oocyte and the nurse cells are descended from a single germline stem cell, however cytokinesis is incomplete in these cell divisions, and the cytoplasm of the nurse cells and the oocyte is connected by structures known as ring canals.[5] Only the oocyte undergoes meiosis and contributes DNA to the next generation.

Many maternal effect Drosophila mutants have been found that affect the early steps in embryogenesis such as axis determination, including bicoid, dorsal, gurken and oskar.[6][7][8] For example, embryos from homozygous bicoid mothers fail to produce head and thorax structures.

Once the gene that is disrupted in the bicoid mutant was identified, it was shown that bicoid mRNA is transcribed in the nurse cells and then relocalized to the oocyte.[9] Other maternal effect mutants either affect products that are similarly produced in the nurse cells and act in the oocyte, or parts of the transportation machinery that are required for this relocalization.[10] Since these genes are expressed in the (maternal) nurse cells and not in the oocyte or fertilised embryo, the maternal genotype determines whether they can function.

Maternal effect genes[11] are expressed during oogenesis by the mother (expressed prior to fertilization) and develop the anterior-posterior and dorsal ventral polarity of the egg. The anterior end of the egg becomes the head; posterior end becomes the tail. the dorsal side is on the top; the ventral side is in underneath. The products of maternal effect genes called maternal mRNAs are produced by nurse cell and follicle cells and deposited in the egg cells (oocytes). At the start of development process, mRNA gradients are formed in oocytes along anterior-posterior and dorsal ventral axes.

About thirty maternal genes are involved in pattern formation have been identified. In particular, products of four maternal effect genes are critical to the formation of anterior-posterior axis. The product of two maternal effect gene, bicoid and hunchback, regulates formation of anterior structure while another pair nanos and caudal, specifies protein that regulates formation of posterior part of embryo.

The transcript of all four genes-bicoid, hunchback, caudal, nanos are synthesized by nurse and follicle cells and transported into the oocytes.

In birds

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In birds, mothers may pass down hormones in their eggs that affect an offspring's growth and behavior. Experiments in domestic canaries have shown that eggs that contain more yolk androgens develop into chicks that display more social dominance. Similar variation in yolk androgen levels has been seen in bird species like the American coot, though the mechanism of effect has yet to be established.[12]

In humans

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In 2015, obesity theorist Edward Archer published "The Childhood Obesity Epidemic as a Result of Nongenetic Evolution: The Maternal Resources Hypothesis" and a series of works on maternal effects in human obesity and health.[13][14][15][16] In this body of work, Archer argued that accumulative maternal effects via the non-genetic evolution of matrilineal nutrient metabolism is responsible for the increased global prevalence of obesity and diabetes mellitus type 2. Archer posited that decrements in maternal metabolic control altered fetal pancreatic beta cell, adipocyte (fat cell) and myocyte (muscle cell) development thereby inducing an enduring competitive advantage of adipocytes in the acquisition and sequestering on nutrient energy.

In plants

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The environmental cues such as light, temperature, soil moisture and nutrients that the mother plant encounters can cause variations in seed quality, even within the same genotype. Thus, the mother plant greatly influences seed traits such as seed size, germination rate, and viability.[17]

Environmental maternal effects

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The environment or condition of the mother can also in some situations influence the phenotype of her offspring, independent of the offspring's genotype.

Paternal effect genes

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In contrast, a paternal effect is when a phenotype results from the genotype of the father, rather than the genotype of the individual.[18] The genes responsible for these effects are components of sperm that are involved in fertilization and early development.[19] An example of a paternal-effect gene is the ms(3)sneaky in Drosophila. Males with a mutant allele of this gene produce sperm that are able to fertilize an egg, but the sneaky-inseminated eggs do not develop normally. However, females with this mutation produce eggs that undergo normal development when fertilized.[20]

Adaptive maternal effects

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Adaptive maternal effects induce phenotypic changes in offspring that result in an increase in fitness.[21] These changes arise from mothers sensing environmental cues that work to reduce offspring fitness, and then responding to them in a way that then "prepares" offspring for their future environments. A key characteristic of "adaptive maternal effects" phenotypes is their plasticity. Phenotypic plasticity gives organisms the ability to respond to different environments by altering their phenotype. With these "altered" phenotypes increasing fitness it becomes important to look at the likelihood that adaptive maternal effects will evolve and become a significant phenotypic adaptation to an environment.

Defining adaptive maternal effects

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When traits are influenced by either the maternal environment or the maternal phenotype, it is said to be influenced by maternal effects. Maternal effects work to alter the phenotypes of the offspring through pathways other than DNA.[22] Adaptive maternal effects are when these maternal influences lead to a phenotypic change that increases the fitness of the offspring.[23] In general, adaptive maternal effects are a mechanism to cope with factors that work to reduce offspring fitness;[24] they are also environment specific.

It can sometimes be difficult to differentiate between maternal and adaptive maternal effects. Consider the following: Gypsy moths reared on foliage of black oak, rather than chestnut oak, had offspring that developed faster.[25] This is a maternal, not an adaptive maternal effect. In order to be an adaptive maternal effect, the mother's environment would have to have led to a change in the eating habits or behavior of the offspring.[25] The key difference between the two therefore, is that adaptive maternal effects are environment specific. The phenotypes that arise are in response to the mother sensing an environment that would reduce the fitness of her offspring. By accounting for this environment she is then able to alter the phenotypes to actually increase the offspring's fitness. Maternal effects are not in response to an environmental cue, and further they have the potential to increase offspring fitness, but they may not.

When looking at the likelihood of these "altered" phenotypes evolving there are many factors and cues involved. Adaptive maternal effects evolve only when offspring can face many potential environments; when a mother can "predict" the environment into which her offspring will be born; and when a mother can influence her offspring's phenotype, thereby increasing their fitness.[25] The summation of all of these factors can then lead to these "altered" traits becoming favorable for evolution.

The phenotypic changes that arise from adaptive maternal effects are a result of the mother sensing that a certain aspect of the environment may decrease the survival of her offspring. When sensing a cue the mother "relays" information to the developing offspring and therefore induces adaptive maternal effects. This tends to then cause the offspring to have a higher fitness because they are "prepared" for the environment they are likely to experience.[24] These cues can include responses to predators, habitat, high population density, and food availability[26][27][28]

The increase in size of Northern American red squirrels is a great example of an adaptive maternal effect producing a phenotype that resulted in an increased fitness. The adaptive maternal effect was induced by the mothers sensing the high population density and correlating it to low food availability per individual. Her offspring were on average larger than other squirrels of the same species; they also grew faster. Ultimately, the squirrels born during this period of high population density showed an increased survival rate (and therefore fitness) during their first winter.[26]

Phenotypic plasticity

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When analyzing the types of changes that can occur to a phenotype, we can see changes that are behavioral, morphological, or physiological. A characteristic of the phenotype that arises through adaptive maternal effects, is the plasticity of this phenotype. Phenotypic plasticity allows organisms to adjust their phenotype to various environments, thereby enhancing their fitness to changing environmental conditions.[24] Ultimately it is a key attribute to an organism's, and a population's, ability to adapt to short term environmental change.[29][30]

Phenotypic plasticity can be seen in many organisms, one species that exemplifies this concept is the seed beetle Stator limbatus. This seed beetle reproduces on different host plants, two of the more common ones being Cercidium floridum and Acacia greggii. When C. floridum is the host plant, there is selection for a large egg size; when A. greggii is the host plant, there is a selection for a smaller egg size. In an experiment it was seen that when a beetle who usually laid eggs on A. greggii was put onto C. floridum, the survivorship of the laid eggs was lower compared to those eggs produced by a beetle that was conditioned and remained on the C. florium host plant. Ultimately these experiments showed the plasticity of egg size production in the beetle, as well as the influence of the maternal environment on the survivorship of the offspring.[27]

Further examples of adaptive maternal effects

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In many insects:

  • Cues such as rapidly cooling temperatures or decreasing daylight can result in offspring that enter into a dormant state. They therefore will better survive the cooling temperatures and preserve energy.[31]
  • When parents are forced to lay eggs on environments with low nutrients, offspring will be provided with more resources, such as higher nutrients, through an increased egg size.[27]
  • Cues such as poor habitat or crowding can lead to offspring with wings. The wings allow the offspring to move away from poor environments to ones that will provide better resources.[31]

Maternal diet and environment influence epigenetic effects

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Related to adaptive maternal effects are epigenetic effects. Epigenetics is the study of long lasting changes in gene expression that are produced by modifications to chromatin instead of changes in DNA sequence, as is seen in DNA mutation. This "change" refers to DNA methylation, histone acetylation, or the interaction of non-coding RNAs with DNA. DNA methylation is the addition of methyl groups to the DNA. When DNA is methylated in mammals, the transcription of the gene at that location is turned down or turned off entirely. The induction of DNA methylation is highly influenced by the maternal environment. Some maternal environments can lead to a higher methylation of an offspring's DNA, while others lower methylation.[22][citation needed] The fact that methylation can be influenced by the maternal environment, makes it similar to adaptive maternal effects. Further similarities are seen by the fact that methylation can often increase the fitness of the offspring. Additionally, epigenetics can refer to histone modifications or non-coding RNAs that create a sort of cellular memory. Cellular memory refers to a cell's ability to pass nongenetic information to its daughter cell during replication. For example, after differentiation, a liver cell performs different functions than a brain cell; cellular memory allows these cells to "remember" what functions they are supposed to perform after replication. Some of these epigenetic changes can be passed down to future generations, while others are reversible within a particular individual's lifetime. This can explain why individuals with identical DNA can differ in their susceptibility to certain chronic diseases.

Currently, researchers are examining the correlations between maternal diet during pregnancy and its effect on the offspring's susceptibility for chronic diseases later in life. The fetal programming hypothesis highlights the idea that environmental stimuli during critical periods of fetal development can have lifelong effects on body structure and health and in a sense they prepare offspring for the environment they will be born into. Many of these variations are thought to be due to epigenetic mechanisms brought on by maternal environment such as stress, diet, gestational diabetes, and exposure to tobacco and alcohol. These factors are thought to be contributing factors to obesity and cardiovascular disease, neural tube defects, cancer, diabetes, etc.[32] Studies to determine these epigenetic mechanisms are usually performed through laboratory studies of rodents and epidemiological studies of humans.

Importance for the general population

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Knowledge of maternal diet induced epigenetic changes is important not only for scientists, but for the general public. Perhaps the most obvious place of importance for maternal dietary effects is within the medical field. In the United States and worldwide, many non-communicable diseases, such as cancer, obesity, and heart disease, have reached epidemic proportions. The medical field is working on methods to detect these diseases, some of which have been discovered to be heavily driven by epigenetic alterations due to maternal dietary effects. Once the genomic markers for these diseases are identified, research can begin to be implemented to identify the early onset of these diseases and possibly reverse the epigenetic effects of maternal diet in later life stages. The reversal of epigenetic effects will utilize the pharmaceutical field in an attempt to create drugs which target the specific genes and genomic alterations. The creation of drugs to cure these non-communicable diseases could be used to treat individuals who already have these illnesses. General knowledge of the mechanisms behind maternal dietary epigenetic effects is also beneficial in terms of awareness. The general public can be aware of the risks of certain dietary behaviors during pregnancy in an attempt to curb the negative consequences which may arise in offspring later in their lives. Epigenetic knowledge can lead to an overall healthier lifestyle for the billions of people worldwide.

The effect of maternal diet in species other than humans is also relevant. Many of the long term effects of global climate change are unknown. Knowledge of epigenetic mechanisms can help scientists better predict the impacts of changing community structures on species which are ecologically, economically, and/or culturally important around the world. Since many ecosystems will see changes in species structures, the nutrient availability will also be altered, ultimately affecting the available food choices for reproducing females. Maternal dietary effects may also be used to improve agricultural and aquaculture practices. Breeders may be able to utilize scientific data to create more sustainable practices, saving money for themselves, as well as the consumers.

Maternal diet and environment epigenetically influences susceptibility for adult diseases

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Hyperglycemia during gestation correlated with obesity and heart disease in adulthood

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Hyperglycemia during pregnancy is thought to cause epigenetic changes in the leptin gene of newborns leading to a potential increased risk for obesity and heart disease. Leptin is sometimes known as the "satiety hormone" because it is released by fat cells to inhibit hunger. By studying both animal models and human observational studies, it has been suggested that a leptin surge in the perinatal period plays a critical role in contributing to long-term risk of obesity. The perinatal period begins at 22 weeks gestation and ends a week after birth.[34] DNA methylation near the leptin locus has been examined to determine if there was a correlation between maternal glycemia and neonatal leptin levels. Results showed that glycemia was inversely associated with the methylation states of LEP gene, which controls the production of the leptin hormone. Therefore, higher glycemic levels in mothers corresponded to lower methylation states in LEP gene in their children. With this lower methylation state, the LEP gene is transcribed more often, thereby inducing higher blood leptin levels.[33] These higher blood leptin levels during the perinatal period were linked to obesity in adulthood, perhaps due to the fact that a higher "normal" level of leptin was set during gestation. Because obesity is a large contributor to heart disease, this leptin surge is not only correlated with obesity but also heart disease.

High fat diets during gestation correlated with metabolic syndrome

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High fat diets in utero are believed to cause metabolic syndrome. Metabolic syndrome is a set of symptoms including obesity and insulin resistance that appear to be related. This syndrome is often associated with type II diabetes as well as hypertension and atherosclerosis. Using mice models, researchers have shown that high fat diets in utero cause modifications to the adiponectin and leptin genes that alter gene expression; these changes contribute to metabolic syndrome. The adiponectin genes regulate glucose metabolism as well as fatty acid breakdown; however, the exact mechanisms are not entirely understood. In both human and mice models, adiponectin has been shown to add insulin-sensitizing and anti-inflammatory properties to different types of tissue, specifically muscle and liver tissue. Adiponectin has also been shown to increase the rate of fatty acid transport and oxidation in mice, which causes an increase in fatty acid metabolism.[34] With a high fat diet during gestation, there was an increase in methylation in the promoter of the adiponectin gene accompanied by a decrease in acetylation. These changes likely inhibit the transcription of the adiponectin genes because increases in methylation and decreases in acetylation usually repress transcription. Additionally, there was an increase in methylation of the leptin promoter, which turns down the production of the leptin gene. Therefore, there was less adiponectin to help cells take up glucose and break down fat, as well as less leptin to cause a feeling of satiety. The decrease in these hormones caused fat mass gain, glucose intolerance, hypertriglyceridemia, abnormal adiponectin and leptin levels, and hypertension throughout the animal's lifetime. However, the effect was abolished after three subsequent generations with normal diets. This study highlights the fact that these epigenetic marks can be altered in as many as one generation and can even be completely eliminated over time.[35] This study highlighted the connection between high fat diets to the adiponectin and leptin in mice. In contrast, few studies have been done in humans to show the specific effects of high fat diets in utero on humans. However, it has been shown that decreased adiponectin levels are associated with obesity, insulin resistance, type II diabetes, and coronary artery disease in humans. It is postulated that a similar mechanism as the one described in mice may also contribute to metabolic syndrome in humans.[34]

High fat diets during gestation correlated with chronic inflammation

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In addition, high fat diets cause chronic low-grade inflammation in the placenta, adipose, liver, brain, and vascular system. Inflammation is an important aspect of the bodies' natural defense system after injury, trauma, or disease. During an inflammatory response, a series of physiological reactions, such as increased blood flow, increased cellular metabolism, and vasodilation, occur in order to help treat the wounded or infected area. However, chronic low-grade inflammation has been linked to long-term consequences such as cardiovascular disease, renal failure, aging, diabetes, etc. This chronic low-grade inflammation is commonly seen in obese individuals on high fat diets. In a mice model, excessive cytokines were detected in mice fed on a high fat diet. Cytokines aid in cell signaling during immune responses, specifically sending cells towards sites of inflammation, infection, or trauma. The mRNA of proinflammatory cytokines was induced in the placenta of mothers on high fat diets. The high fat diets also caused changes in microbiotic composition, which led to hyperinflammatory colonic responses in offspring. This hyperinflammatory response can lead to inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis.[35] As previously mentioned, high fat diets in utero contribute to obesity; however, some proinflammatory factors, like IL-6 and MCP-1, are also linked to body fat deposition. It has been suggested that histone acetylation is closely associated with inflammation because the addition of histone deacetylase inhibitors has been shown to reduce the expression of proinflammatory mediators in glial cells. This reduction in inflammation resulted in improved neural cell function and survival. This inflammation is also often associated with obesity, cardiovascular disease, fatty liver, brain damage, as well as preeclampsia and preterm birth. Although it has been shown that high fat diets induce inflammation, which contribute to all these chronic diseases; it is unclear as to how this inflammation acts as a mediator between diet and chronic disease.[36]

Undernutrition during gestation correlated with cardiovascular disease

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A study done after the Dutch Hunger Winter of 1944-1945 showed that undernutrition during the early stages of pregnancy are associated with hypomethylation of the insulin-like growth factor II (IGF2) gene even after six decades. These individuals had significantly lower methylation rates as compared to their same sex sibling who had not been conceived during the famine. A comparison was done with children conceived prior to the famine so that their mothers were nutrient deprived during the later stages of gestation; these children had normal methylation patterns. The IGF2 stands for insulin-like growth factor II; this gene is a key contributor in human growth and development. IGF2 gene is also maternally imprinted meaning that the mother's gene is silenced. The mother's gene is typically methylated at the differentially methylated region (DMR); however, when hypomethylated, the gene is bi-allelically expressed. Thus, individuals with lower methylation states likely lost some of the imprinting effect. Similar results have been demonstrated in the Nr3c1 and Ppara genes of the offspring of rats fed on an isocaloric protein-deficient diet before starting pregnancy. This further implies that the undernutrition was the cause of the epigenetic changes. Surprisingly, there was not a correlation between methylation states and birth weight. This displayed that birth weight may not be an adequate way to determine nutritional status during gestation. This study stressed that epigenetic effects vary depending on the timing of exposure and that early stages of mammalian development are crucial periods for establishing epigenetic marks. Those exposed earlier in gestation had decreased methylation while those who were exposed at the end of gestation had relatively normal methylation levels.[37] The offspring and descendants of mothers with hypomethylation were more likely to develop cardiovascular disease. Epigenetic alterations that occur during embryogenesis and early fetal development have greater physiologic and metabolic effects because they are transmitted over more mitotic divisions. In other words, the epigenetic changes that occur earlier are more likely to persist in more cells.[37]

Nutrient restriction during gestation correlated with diabetes mellitus type 2

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In another study, researchers discovered that perinatal nutrient restriction resulting in intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) contributes to diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM2). IUGR refers to the poor growth of the baby in utero. In the pancreas, IUGR caused a reduction in the expression of the promoter of the gene encoding a critical transcription factor for beta cell function and development. Pancreatic beta cells are responsible for making insulin; decreased beta cell activity is associated with DM2 in adulthood. In skeletal muscle, IUGR caused a decrease in expression of the Glut-4 gene. The Glut-4 gene controls the production of the Glut-4 transporter; this transporter is specifically sensitive to insulin. Thus, when insulin levels rise, more glut-4 transporters are brought to the cell membrane to increase the uptake of glucose into the cell. This change is caused by histone modifications in the cells of skeletal muscle that decrease the effectiveness of the glucose transport system into the muscle. Because the main glucose transporters are not operating at optimal capacity, these individuals are more likely to develop insulin resistance with energy rich diets later in life, contributing to DM2.[38]

High protein diet during gestation correlated with higher blood pressure and adiposity

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Further studies have examined the epigenetic changes resulting from a high protein/low carbohydrate diet during pregnancy. This diet caused epigenetic changes that were associated with higher blood pressure, higher cortisol levels, and a heightened Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis response to stress. Increased methylation in the 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 (HSD2), glucocorticoid receptor (GR), and H19 ICR were positively correlated with adiposity and blood pressure in adulthood. Glucocorticoids play a vital role in tissue development and maturation as well as having effects on metabolism. Glucocorticoids' access to GR is regulated by HSD1 and HSD2. H19 is an imprinted gene for a long coding RNA (lncRNA), which has limiting effects on body weight and cell proliferation. Therefore, higher methylation rates in H19 ICR repress transcription and prevent the lncRNA from regulating body weight. Mothers who reported higher meat/fish and vegetable intake and lower bread/potato intake in late pregnancy had a higher average methylation in GR and HSD2. However, one common challenge of these types of studies is that many epigenetic modifications have tissue and cell-type specificity DNA methylation patterns. Thus, epigenetic modification patterns of accessible tissues, like peripheral blood, may not represent the epigenetic patterns of the tissue involved in a particular disease.[39]

Neonatal estrogen exposure correlated with prostate cancer

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Strong evidence in rats supports the conclusion that neonatal estrogen exposure plays a role in the development of prostate cancer. Using a human fetal prostate xenograft model, researchers studied the effects of early exposure to estrogen with and without secondary estrogen and testosterone treatment. A xenograft model is a graft of tissue transplanted between organisms of different species. In this case, human tissue was transplanted into rats; therefore, there was no need to extrapolate from rodents to humans. Histopathological lesions, proliferation, and serum hormone levels were measured at various time-points after xenografting. At day 200, the xenograft that had been exposed to two treatments of estrogen showed the most severe changes. Additionally, researchers looked at key genes involved in prostatic glandular and stromal growth, cell-cycle progression, apoptosis, hormone receptors, and tumor suppressors using a custom PCR array. Analysis of DNA methylation showed methylation differences in CpG sites of the stromal compartment after estrogen treatment. These variations in methylation are likely a contributing cause to the changes in the cellular events in the KEGG prostate cancer pathway that inhibit apoptosis and increase cell cycle progression that contribute to the development of cancer.[40]

Supplementation may reverse epigenetic changes

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In utero or neonatal exposure to bisphenol A (BPA), a chemical used in manufacturing polycarbonate plastic, is correlated with higher body weight, breast cancer, prostate cancer, and an altered reproductive function. In a mice model, the mice fed on a BPA diet were more likely to have a yellow coat corresponding to their lower methylation state in the promoter regions of the retrotransposon upstream of the Agouti gene. The Agouti gene is responsible for determining whether an animal's coat will be banded (agouti) or solid (non-agouti). However, supplementation with methyl donors like folic acid or phytoestrogen abolished the hypomethylating effect. This demonstrates that the epigenetic changes can be reversed through diet and supplementation.[41]

Maternal diet effects and ecology

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Maternal dietary effects are not just seen in humans, but throughout many taxa in the animal kingdom. These maternal dietary effects can result in ecological changes on a larger scale throughout populations and from generation to generation. The plasticity involved in these epigenetic changes due to maternal diet represents the environment into which the offspring will be born. Many times, epigenetic effects on offspring from the maternal diet during development will genetically prepare the offspring to be better adapted for the environment in which they will first encounter. The epigenetic effects of maternal diet can be seen in many species, utilizing different ecological cues and epigenetic mechanisms to provide an adaptive advantage to future generations.

Within the field of ecology, there are many examples of maternal dietary effects. Unfortunately, the epigenetic mechanisms underlying these phenotypic changes are rarely investigated. In the future, it would be beneficial for ecological scientists as well as epigenetic and genomic scientists to work together to fill the holes within the ecology field to produce a complete picture of environmental cues and epigenetic alterations producing phenotypic diversity.

Parental diet affects offspring immunity

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A pyralid moth species, Plodia interpunctella, commonly found in food storage areas, exhibits maternal dietary effects, as well as paternal dietary effects, on its offspring. Epigenetic changes in moth offspring affect the production of phenoloxidase, an enzyme involved with melanization and correlated with resistance of certain pathogens in many invertebrate species. In this study, parent moths were housed in food rich or food poor environments during their reproductive period. Moths who were housed in food poor environments produced offspring with less phenoloxidase, and thus had a weaker immune system, than moths who reproduced in food rich environments. This is believed to be adaptive because the offspring develop while receiving cues of scarce nutritional opportunities. These cues allow the moth to allocate energy differentially, decreasing energy allocated for the immune system and devoting more energy towards growth and reproduction to increase fitness and insure future generations. One explanation for this effect may be imprinting, the expression of only one parental gene over the other, but further research has yet to be done.[42]

Parental-mediated dietary epigenetic effects on immunity has a broader significance on wild organisms. Changes in immunity throughout an entire population may make the population more susceptible to an environmental disturbance, such as the introduction of a pathogen. Therefore, these transgenerational epigenetic effects can influence the population dynamics by decreasing the stability of populations who inhabit environments different from the parental environment that offspring are epigenetically modified for.

Maternal diet affects offspring growth rate

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Food availability also influences the epigenetic mechanisms driving growth rate in the mouthbrooding cichlid, Simochromis pleurospilus. When nutrient availability is high, reproducing females will produce many small eggs, versus fewer, larger eggs in nutrient poor environments. Egg size often correlates with fish larvae body size at hatching: smaller larvae hatch from smaller eggs. In the case of the cichlid, small larvae grow at a faster rate than their larger egg counterparts. This is due to the increased expression of GHR, the growth hormone receptor. Increased transcription levels of GHR genes increase the receptors available to bind with growth hormone, GH, leading to an increased growth rate in smaller fish. Fish of larger size are less likely to be eaten by predators, therefore it is advantageous to grow quickly in early life stages to insure survival. The mechanism by which GHR transcription is regulated is unknown, but it may be due to hormones within the yolk produced by the mother, or just by the yolk quantity itself. This may lead to DNA methylation or histone modifications which control genic transcription levels.[43]

Ecologically, this is an example of the mother utilizing her environment and determining the best method to maximize offspring survival, without actually making a conscious effort to do so. Ecology is generally driven by the ability of an organism to compete to obtain nutrients and successfully reproduce. If a mother is able to gather a plentiful amount of resources, she will have a higher fecundity and produce offspring who are able to grow quickly to avoid predation. Mothers who are unable to obtain as many nutrients will produce fewer offspring, but the offspring will be larger in hopes that their large size will help insure survival into sexual maturation. Unlike the moth example, the maternal effects provided to the cichlid offspring do not prepare the cichlids for the environment that they will be born into; this is because mouth brooding cichlids provide parental care to their offspring, providing a stable environment for the offspring to develop. Offspring who have a greater growth rate can become independent more quickly than slow growing counterparts, therefore decreasing the amount of energy spent by the parents during the parental care period.

A similar phenomenon occurs in the sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis. Urchin mothers in nutrient rich environments produce a large number of small eggs. Offspring from these small eggs grow at a faster rate than their large egg counterparts from nutrient poor mothers. Again, it is beneficial for sea urchin larvae, known as planula, to grow quickly to decrease the duration of their larval phase and metamorphose into a juvenile to decrease predation risks. Sea urchin larvae have the ability to develop into one of two phenotypes, based on their maternal and larval nutrition. Larvae who grow at a fast rate from high nutrition, are able to devote more of their energy towards development into the juvenile phenotype. Larvae who grow at a slower rate with low nutrition, devote more energy towards growing spine-like appendages to protect themselves from predators in an attempt to increase survival into the juvenile phase. The determination of these phenotypes is based on both the maternal and the juvenile nutrition. The epigenetic mechanisms behind these phenotypic changes is unknown, but it is believed that there may be a nutritional threshold that triggers epigenetic changes affecting development and, ultimately, the larval phenotype.[44]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The maternal effect is a biological in which the or of a causally influences the of her , mediated through non-genetic such as cytoplasmic factors in the , distinct from direct genomic transmission or cytoplasmic inheritance like . This effect allows maternal contributions, including mRNAs, proteins, and nutrients deposited in the , to direct early embryonic development before the activation of the zygotic genome, which typically occurs at the 2- to 8-cell stage in mammals. In developmental genetics, maternal-effect genes (MEGs) encode these essential oocyte factors that regulate critical processes such as epigenetic reprogramming, cell division, and genomic imprinting, with disruptions leading to embryonic arrest or abnormalities regardless of the embryo's genotype. Over 80 MEGs have been identified in mammals, including key genes like NLRP7 and PADI6 in humans, which form complexes such as the subcortical maternal complex to support preimplantation development. Classic examples from model organisms illustrate this: in Drosophila melanogaster, mutations in maternal genes like bicoid result in offspring lacking anterior structures, while in mice, knockout of Mater (Nlrp5) causes failure to progress beyond the 2-cell stage. Beyond development, maternal effects play a pivotal role in by enhancing and adaptive responses, as the mother's environmental experiences—such as or stress—can provisionally alter offspring traits like size, behavior, or disease susceptibility through mechanisms like transfer or provisioning. For instance, in like , maternal seed coat architecture influences offspring timing, demonstrating ecological relevance. In , these effects contribute to additive genetic variance and dynamics, potentially amplifying evolutionary rates under or . In humans, maternal effects have significant clinical implications, with mutations in MEGs linked to cases of , which affects approximately 1 in 6 adults worldwide. These mutations are also associated with recurrent pregnancy loss, hydatidiform moles, and multilocus imprinting disorders like Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. Additionally, structural birth defects, including craniofacial and cardiac anomalies, occur in about 6% of births worldwide, with some cases associated with maternal genetic contributions such as mutations in MEGs, highlighting the need for research into quality in assisted reproductive technologies.

Fundamentals

Definition and Genetic Basis

The maternal effect is a form of in where the of the offspring is primarily determined by the genotype of the mother, rather than the offspring's own , through the deposition of cytoplasmic factors such as mRNAs, proteins, and organelles into the egg during . This contrasts with standard , in which the offspring's traits arise directly from the interaction of its nuclear genes with the environment. These maternal contributions enable the control of early embryonic development before the zygotic genome becomes active. The genetic basis of maternal effects stems from the asymmetric contributions of the parental to the , particularly the substantial cytoplasmic from the mother during formation. In , the developing accumulates vast amounts of maternal products and organelles, far exceeding the minimal cytoplasmic content provided by during , thus allowing the maternal to dictate initial developmental cues. Archetypal examples include the bicoid and nanos genes, whose maternal mRNA transcripts establish key polarity gradients in the . This phenomenon was first elucidated in 1923 by Alfred H. Sturtevant through experiments on shell coiling in the snail Lymnaea peregra, revealing a maternal-effect pattern of controlled by the mother's nuclear , which influences the direction of shell coiling through the organization of the egg . A key distinction from nuclear is that the offspring's exerts influence only after maternal factors are depleted, typically coinciding with zygotic activation, when embryonic transcription replaces maternal provisions.

Molecular Mechanisms

Maternal factors exert control over early embryonic development primarily through maternally deposited cytoplasmic factors, where the accumulates essential molecules during that are asymmetrically deposited into the . This process involves the maternal deposition of mRNAs, proteins, and organelles, such as mitochondria, which provide the initial developmental machinery before zygotic transcription begins. Mitochondria, for instance, are almost exclusively inherited from the maternal lineage due to the dilution or exclusion of paternal organelles during fertilization, ensuring uniparental transmission that supports energy production in the early . Translational control of maternal mRNAs is a key mechanism enabling precise spatiotemporal regulation of protein synthesis post-fertilization, when embryonic transcription is minimal or absent. Maternal mRNAs are stored in the in a translationally repressed state and are selectively activated through modifications like cytoplasmic polyadenylation, which lengthens the poly(A) tail to enhance mRNA stability and recruitment to ribosomes. This polyadenylation is mediated by factors such as cytoplasmic polyadenylation element-binding proteins (CPEBs), which respond to developmental cues to trigger translation of specific transcripts, such as those involved in progression or axis formation. The establishment of morphogen gradients represents another critical molecular process, where maternally provided factors to form concentration profiles that pattern the . A prominent example is the Bicoid protein in , where maternal bicoid mRNA is localized to the anterior pole of the , leading to localized translation and of the Bicoid protein to create an anterior-to-posterior gradient. This gradient acts in a concentration-dependent manner to activate target genes at specific thresholds, thereby specifying positional identity along the embryonic axis. The transition from maternal to zygotic control occurs at zygotic genome activation (ZGA), a species-specific event marking the onset of embryonic transcription and the degradation of many maternal factors. In many animals, this coincides with the mid-blastula transition (MBT), where rapid embryonic cleavages increase the nucleus-to-cytoplasm ratio, triggering and the release of transcriptional repressors to enable ZGA. The timing of ZGA varies; for example, it initiates around the 13th nuclear division in , allowing maternal products to direct early patterning before the zygotic genome takes over. Experimental evidence for these mechanisms has been robustly demonstrated through (RNAi) studies, which selectively deplete maternal mRNAs to reveal their essential roles. In mouse oocytes, of antisense oligonucleotides or double-stranded RNA targeting dormant maternal transcripts, such as Mos kinase mRNA, disrupts meiotic maturation and subsequent embryogenesis by preventing timely protein synthesis. Similarly, in , maternal RNAi knockdown of bicoid mRNA abolishes the anterior Bicoid gradient, resulting in embryos lacking head and thoracic structures, confirming the direct causal link between maternal factors and developmental outcomes. These approaches highlight how loss of specific maternal mRNAs phenocopies genetic mutants, underscoring the biochemical precision of maternal control.

Maternal Effects Across Organisms

In Drosophila Early Embryogenesis

In , early embryogenesis relies heavily on maternal effects, where products supplied by the mother during establish the 's polarity and direct initial patterning. The chamber consists of a single and 15 interconnected nurse cells, which synthesize and transport maternal mRNAs and proteins into the to set up anterior-posterior () and dorsal-ventral (D/V) axes. Key maternal s like gurken and oskar play pivotal roles in this organization: gurken mRNA localizes to the anterodorsal region of the , where its translation activates the EGF receptor in overlying follicle cells to specify dorsal fate and establish D/V polarity during mid-. Similarly, oskar mRNA is transported to the posterior pole, nucleating pole plasm assembly essential for polarity and posterior structure formation, including specification. These localization events depend on microtubule-based transport and anchoring mechanisms within the . Central to A/P axis specification are the maternal genes bicoid and nanos, whose mRNAs are asymmetrically deposited during . Bicoid mRNA localizes to the anterior pole via nurse cell , and upon fertilization, it translates into Bicoid protein that diffuses to form an exponential , acting as a to activate anterior-specific genes in a dose-dependent manner. At the posterior, nanos mRNA is initially distributed uniformly but becomes translationally repressed everywhere except the pole plasm, where Oskar facilitates its localized activity; the resulting Nanos protein represses of maternal hunchback mRNA in the posterior, preventing anterior fates there. These opposing gradients of Bicoid and Nanos provide positional that patterns the along the A/P axis. Maternal inputs from these genes initiate the segmentation cascade by regulating the expression of zygotic segmentation genes, including gap, pair-rule, and segment polarity genes. Bicoid directly activates anterior gap genes like hunchback and Krüppel in broad domains, while Nanos indirectly influences posterior gap genes such as knirps by modulating Hunchback levels; these gap genes then cross-regulate to refine domains and activate pair-rule genes like even-skipped and fushi tarazu in seven-stripe patterns, which in turn regulate segment polarity genes such as engrailed and wingless to define intra-segmental boundaries. Disruptions in maternal contributions reveal their dominance, as seen in bicaudal mutants, where reversed polarity leads to mirror-image duplication of posterior abdominal segments at the expense of anterior structures. Maternal control persists through the first 13 rapid nuclear divisions post-fertilization, during which syncytial divisions occur without zygotic transcription, relying solely on preloaded maternal factors for patterning. Zygotic genome activation (ZGA) initiates at nuclear cycle 14, marking the transition to zygotic control, though maternal products continue to influence early segmentation. This understanding stems from seminal genetic screens conducted by and Eric Wieschaus in the late 1970s and early 1980s, which identified maternal-effect mutants disrupting embryonic , earning them the 1995 in Physiology or Medicine for elucidating genetic mechanisms of early development.

In Vertebrates and Humans

In birds, maternal effects are primarily mediated through the , where the provides critical nutrients such as , proteins, and vitamins essential for embryonic growth and survival. Additionally, mothers deposit antibodies into the and albumen, conferring to against pathogens during the vulnerable pre-hatching period. These provisions reflect the mother's physiological condition and environmental exposures, directly shaping viability and early development. Maternal hormones, particularly , are transferred from the female's circulation into the , with concentrations in the mirroring maternal stress levels within physiological ranges. Elevated can alter , such as increasing or reducing begging intensity, potentially as an adaptive response to environmental challenges. Furthermore, maternal has been linked to biases in some , though body condition often plays a more direct role in producing male-biased broods under certain conditions. These hormonal effects highlight how mothers can fine-tune phenotypes to match predicted ecological demands. In mammals, maternal effects extend beyond gametic contributions to include , an epigenetic mechanism that silences genes based on parental origin, influencing during . For instance, the (IGF2) gene is paternally expressed and promotes fetal and placental growth by enhancing nutrient uptake from the maternal circulation, while the maternal is silenced. This parent-of-origin effect underscores a genetic conflict over resource partitioning, with the acting as a key interface. The uterine environment further amplifies maternal influence through hormonal signaling and nutrient provisioning via the , where imprinted genes like IGF2 regulate vascularization and transport efficiency to support fetal demands. Maternal imprints on these genes directly affect placental development and hypothalamic regulation of provisioning behaviors, ensuring co-adaptation between mother and . Disruptions in this uterine milieu, such as poor , can lead to by limiting the efficacy of these imprinted pathways. In humans, maternal during early is strongly associated with defects (NTDs) in , such as and , due to impaired and critical for closure. Periconceptional folic acid supplementation reduces NTD risk by 50-70%, highlighting the direct impact of maternal nutrient status on embryonic . Additionally, X-chromosome inactivation (XCI), the process silencing one X chromosome in female cells to balance , can be influenced by maternal environmental factors; for example, maternal delays XCI onset, potentially expanding the pool of cells available for inactivation and skewing patterns. A key aspect of maternal control in oogenesis is the prolonged arrest of oocytes at of I, which occurs after birth in mammals and allows accumulation of maternal mRNAs, proteins, and organelles essential for oocyte quality and subsequent embryonic competence. This arrest, maintained by high cyclic AMP (cAMP) levels and (PKA) activity, enables the follicle to regulate maturation timing in response to hormonal cues like , ensuring only high-quality oocytes proceed to . Defects in this maternal provisioning during arrest contribute to and reduced developmental potential. Clinically, maternal age significantly impacts fertilization (IVF) outcomes, with success rates declining sharply after age 35 due to diminished quality from age-related depletion of maternal factors, including mitochondrial function and spindle integrity. Women over 40 retrieve fewer oocytes and experience higher rates (>50%), leading to lower implantation and live birth rates despite optimized protocols. Interventions like before age 35 or donor oocytes mitigate these effects by preserving or bypassing age-degraded maternal contributions.

In Plants

In plants, maternal effects play a crucial role in reproduction by influencing seed development through contributions from the female gametophyte and surrounding sporophytic tissues. These effects ensure proper nutrient allocation, epigenetic regulation, and protection of the developing embryo and endosperm, often manifesting as inheritance patterns where the maternal genotype predominantly controls offspring traits. This contrasts briefly with animal systems, such as Drosophila, where maternal factors establish embryonic axis formation. The , a triploid nutritive tissue central to seed viability, arises from involving two maternal polar nuclei and one paternal sperm nucleus. in the endosperm leads to maternal dominance, where maternal alleles are preferentially expressed over paternal ones, regulating and nutrient transfer. In , for instance, imprinted genes like Meg1 promote nutrient allocation to the offspring from maternal tissues, while extensive parental imprinting of protein-coding genes and transposable elements reinforces this maternal control during early development. RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) represents a key epigenetic mechanism of maternal effects in , where small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) produced in maternal tissues silence transposable elements in . These 24-nucleotide siRNAs, generated via the RdDM pathway involving RNA polymerase IV, are transmitted from the female to the and , establishing de novo to maintain stability. In , maternal siRNAs target thousands of transposable elements, preventing their activation during seed development and ensuring proper parental genomic contributions. Maternal sporophytic tissues, such as the seed coat and pericarp, provide essential physical protection and nutritional support to the developing seed while influencing and . The seed coat, derived from the integuments, acts as a barrier regulating and , thereby imposing physical that delays until favorable conditions arise. The pericarp, an outer fruit layer, further modulates these processes by controlling oxygen permeability and signaling, with maternal environmental cues during seed maturation affecting progeny levels. Notable examples of maternal effects include mutants in that disrupt embryogenesis. The MATERNAL EFFECT EMBRYO ARREST45 (MEE45) gene modulates maternal biosynthesis, controlling seed size and patterning when mutated in the female parent. Similarly, the MEDEA (MEA) polycomb group gene exhibits gametophytic maternal effects, leading to aberrant growth due to failed imprinting and ectopic in the . Hybrid seed inviability often stems from maternal-paternal mismatches, such as imbalance in interspecies crosses, where improper causes developmental arrest, as observed in Mimulus species complexes. Evolutionarily, maternal control in allows plants to optimize to offspring, with the female parent dictating endosperm development and seed provisioning to maximize fitness in sessile organisms. This system, unique to angiosperms, evolved to resolve parental conflicts over nutrient investment, ensuring the biparental supports growth while maternal tissues enforce selective provisioning.

Environmental Influences

Direct Environmental Maternal Effects

Direct environmental maternal effects occur when a mother's exposure to external factors, such as , pollutants, or stress, directly influences development through non-genetic provisioning like hormones or nutrients in eggs or , distinct from genetic . These effects shape phenotypes immediately upon conception or early development, often via maternal deposition of signaling molecules or altered resource allocation during . For instance, in oviparous , the maternal environment determines the quality and quantity of provided to embryos, which can buffer or exacerbate environmental challenges faced by the . In reptiles exhibiting (TSD), the maternal choice of nest site directly affects sex ratios by controlling temperatures, as higher temperatures typically produce while cooler ones yield males. This maternal evolves rapidly in response to environmental pressures, with studies showing that shifts in nesting preferences can alter primary sex ratios within a few generations to match climatic conditions. For example, in the lizard Bassiana duperreyi, maternal nest temperature selection mediates seasonal sex ratio variations, ensuring adaptive production without genetic changes. Maternal exposure to environmental toxins, such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), leads to their bioaccumulation and deposition into eggs, causing direct developmental abnormalities in offspring of fish and birds. In avian species like American kestrels (Falco sparverius), PCB-laden eggs result in embryonic edema, reduced growth, and teratogenic defects, with higher concentrations correlating to increased mortality rates. Similarly, in fish like zebrafish (Danio rerio), maternal PCB transfer impairs larval feeding efficiency and causes dose-dependent morphological deformities, highlighting the role of lipophilic pollutants in disrupting early organogenesis. Maternal stress from predation risk triggers the release and transgenerational transfer of glucocorticoids, such as , which alter behavior to enhance survival in risky environments. In species like snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus), elevated maternal glucocorticoids during predator exposure lead to with heightened vigilance and reduced activity, preparing them for similar threats without relying on learned behavior. This hormonal signaling persists post-hatching, influencing traits like caution in vertebrates and alike. These effects are mediated primarily through hormonal pathways and differential nutrient allocation in maternal gonads, where environmental cues prompt adjustments in yolk composition or steroid deposition independent of genomic alterations. For example, in fish like threespine sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus), predation-stressed mothers allocate more glucocorticoids to eggs, directly modifying offspring boldness via receptor activation in embryonic tissues. Nutrient shifts, such as increased lipid provisioning under stress, further support rapid phenotypic responses by fueling metabolic demands during critical developmental windows. A notable case study involves water fleas (Daphnia spp.), where maternal exposure to crowding or predation cues induces morphological defenses in offspring, such as enhanced helmet formation for predator evasion. In Daphnia cucullata, mothers subjected to high-density conditions or kairomone signals from predators produce larger-helmeted progeny through direct transfer of chemical mediators in brood pouches, increasing offspring survival against gape-limited predators like fish. This transgenerational plasticity demonstrates how immediate environmental pressures on the mother can preemptively arm offspring against analogous hazards.

Epigenetic Modifications from Maternal Environment

Maternal environmental factors, such as diet and stress, can induce heritable epigenetic changes in through alterations in and modifications, distinct from direct phenotypic effects. These modifications occur primarily during and early embryogenesis, where the maternal establishes key epigenetic marks that persist post-fertilization despite widespread . For instance, maternal diet provides essential substrates for one-carbon , influencing the deposition of methyl groups on , which affects without altering the underlying sequence. A prominent example involves maternal intake of methyl donors like and , which regulate global patterns in offspring. and serve as precursors in the one-carbon cycle, supplying S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) for DNA methyltransferases to methylate residues, thereby modulating gene imprinting and metastable epialleles. Studies in demonstrate that periconceptional maternal supplementation with these nutrients increases at susceptible loci, altering offspring and phenotypes. In humans, maternal methyl-group donor intake during early has been linked to differential in infant , particularly in metabolism-related genes. The viable yellow (A^vy) model exemplifies how maternal affects metastable epialleles, leading to variable coat color in based on epigenetic states. In this model, the intracisternal A particle (IAP) upstream of the is variably methylated; hypomethylation results in ectopic agouti expression, causing coat color and , while hypermethylation yields pseudoagouti (brown) coats. Maternal dietary methyl donors, such as , betaine, and choline, fed during shift the coat color distribution toward the hypermethylated, lean by enhancing IAP during maturation. This transplacental effect highlights the sensitivity of metastable epialleles to maternal , with implications for heritable metabolic programming. Maternal stress can also propagate epigenetic changes across generations via exceptions to germline reprogramming. In rodents, prenatal maternal stress disrupts DNA methylation and histone acetylation in the fetal brain and germline, allowing marks to persist into the F2 generation despite demethylation waves. For example, chronic maternal stress in rats induces hypomethylation at stress-response genes like Nr3c1 in offspring germ cells, resulting in elevated anxiety and glucocorticoid responses in F1 and F2 progeny. Recent work shows these effects extend to four generations, involving altered transcriptomic landscapes at the maternal-fetal interface. Epigenetic errors from maternal influences contribute to imprinting disorders, such as Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS), characterized by overgrowth and tumor predisposition due to dysregulation at the 11p15.5 imprinted region. BWS often arises from maternal-specific loss of methylation at the KvDMR1 (KCNQ1OT1) imprinting control region (ICR), leading to biallelic expression of growth-promoting genes like IGF2. This hypomethylation, potentially triggered by maternal environmental factors or assisted reproductive technologies affecting epigenetics, disrupts the maternal imprint established in . Approximately 50% of BWS cases involve such epimutations, underscoring the vulnerability of maternal imprints to perturbations. Post-2020 advances using -based epigenome editing have illuminated maternal-specific marks in human . /Cas9 screening in mammalian germlines has identified regulators like EHMT2 (G9a), a that deposits H3K9me2 marks essential for maintaining maternal methylation at ICRs such as SNRPN in . Disruption of EHMT2 via reveals allele-specific loss of maternal imprints, leading to biallelic expression and phenotypes akin to Prader-Willi syndrome. These tools confirm that maternal oocyte marks resist paternal reprogramming influences, providing a framework for studying heritable epigenetic fidelity in humans.

Adaptive and Evolutionary Dimensions

Defining Adaptive Maternal Effects

Adaptive maternal effects represent evolved strategies in which the mother's or the environmental conditions she experiences serve as cues that induce in her , thereby increasing fitness in anticipated future environments. These effects are distinguished from non-adaptive maternal byproducts, which arise incidentally from maternal or stress and do not enhance fitness, often reducing it due to constraints like limited energy reserves. In this context, adaptive maternal effects function as a form of anticipatory , allowing mothers to "program" traits for better and when maternal and environments are correlated. From an evolutionary perspective, adaptive maternal effects align with two primary frameworks: bet-hedging, where mothers produce with variable to minimize fitness variance in unpredictable environments, and predictive plasticity, where reliable maternal cues enable to develop traits matched to specific, foreseeable conditions. This dual approach highlights how maternal effects extend the reach of selection beyond the individual, embodying ' concept of , in which maternal genes influence development independently of direct inheritance, effectively shaping a shared maternal- to maximize . Such mechanisms underscore maternal effects as transgenerational adaptations that bridge immediate environmental responses with long-term evolutionary outcomes. For adaptive maternal effects to evolve and persist, certain preconditions must be met, including a reliable between the environments experienced by mothers and their , ensuring that maternal cues accurately predict selective pressures, and the presence of heritable in the maternal capacity to respond to those cues. Without this environmental predictability, maternal adjustments risk , while the absence of heritable variation limits the potential for to refine these responses over generations. These preconditions facilitate the integration of maternal effects into broader evolutionary dynamics, such as . Theoretical models in formalize the evolutionary potential of maternal effects by partitioning phenotypic variance into components, including maternal genetic effects. The narrow-sense of maternal effects is defined as hm2=VA(m)VPh_m^2 = \frac{V_{A(m)}}{V_P}, where VA(m)V_{A(m)} represents the additive genetic variance attributable to maternal influences on traits, and VPV_P is the total phenotypic variance of the trait. This metric quantifies how much of the observed variation in phenotypes can be attributed to heritable differences among mothers, enabling predictions of evolutionary responses to selection on maternal traits. Establishing the adaptiveness of maternal effects requires rigorous evidence, typically through experimental manipulations such as designs that independently vary maternal and environments to test whether fitness is elevated specifically when their induced traits align with the cued conditions. These criteria emphasize the need for controls that isolate maternal influences from direct genetic or environmental effects, ensuring that observed fitness gains stem from predictive adjustments rather than coincidental correlations.

Examples of Adaptive Maternal Effects

Adaptive maternal effects exemplify predictive plasticity, where mothers adjust offspring phenotypes in anticipation of environmental challenges to enhance survival and reproductive success. These effects often manifest as transgenerational adjustments that match offspring traits to likely future conditions, as defined in prior discussions of adaptive mechanisms. In insects, a classic example occurs in the desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria), where maternal exposure to crowding triggers the production of gregarious-phase offspring. Females reared in dense populations lay eggs that develop into nymphs exhibiting swarming morphology, black patterning, and migratory behavior, adaptations suited to outbreak conditions with abundant resources but high competition. This maternal memory persists through contact pheromones and egg pod foam, ensuring offspring are primed for gregarious life rather than solitary foraging, thereby improving survival during population booms. Among fish, the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) demonstrates maternal predation risk influencing boldness. When females are exposed to predators such as , their display reduced antipredator responses, including less orientation toward threats and increased activity near risky areas, resulting in bolder phenotypes. This adjustment is adaptive in high-predation habitats, where quick and reduced freezing enhance resource acquisition despite elevated risks, as evidenced by repeatable boldness traits in exposed lineages. In mammals, maternal social rank in mouflon sheep (Ovis gmelini) shapes lamb social positions for competitive interactions. Lambs born to dominant ewes inherit higher social ranks through nepotistic support, preparing offspring for resource competition in hierarchical groups, where high-rank individuals secure better access to forage, leading to improved growth and survival rates in competitive environments. Maternal effects vary in generational timing, with immediate impacts on the F1 generation versus anticipatory influences on the F2. In the F1, direct provisioning like egg nutrients or hormones induces rapid phenotypic changes, such as altered morphology in locusts. Anticipatory F2 effects, often mediated through grandmaternal experiences, prepare grandchildren for delayed environmental shifts, as seen in density-dependent adjustments in population-regulating species where F2 offspring show enhanced stress tolerance. These timings allow flexibility in matching traits to short- versus long-term cues. Experimental validation of these adaptive effects frequently employs reciprocal transplants, revealing fitness trade-offs in mismatched environments. These approaches demonstrate the costs of plasticity when maternal cues do not align with offspring conditions.

Health and Disease Implications

Maternal Diet and Adult Offspring Diseases

The developmental origins of and (DOHaD) hypothesis posits that adverse intrauterine conditions, including maternal dietary imbalances, can program long-term susceptibility to chronic diseases in . This concept originated from epidemiological observations by David Barker, who in 1989 reported that , often resulting from maternal undernutrition, was associated with increased rates of in adulthood among men in . Subsequent studies have expanded this to link specific maternal dietary factors during to outcomes, emphasizing how nutrient availability influences fetal development and later risk. Maternal gestational , as seen in , correlates with elevated risks of and heart disease in adult through fetal exposure to excess glucose, which promotes pancreatic beta-cell hyperplasia and . High-fat maternal diets during are linked to and chronic inflammation in , characterized by visceral adiposity, , and persisting into adulthood. Conversely, maternal undernutrition is associated with higher incidences of and in , often via thrifty phenotype adaptations that prioritize energy conservation at the expense of metabolic flexibility. High-protein maternal diets have been connected to and increased adiposity, potentially due to altered vascular development and renal function programming. Additionally, certain maternal dietary patterns, such as low-protein intake, can lead to neonatal exposure that sensitizes the to carcinogenic changes, raising risk later in life. These dietary influences operate through epigenetic and non-epigenetic mechanisms, including altered organ growth, reduced insulin sensitivity, and hypothalamic programming that disrupts appetite regulation and . For instance, nutrient restriction can impair fetal pancreatic and liver development, leading to persistent glucose intolerance, while excess s may reprogram hypothalamic neurons to favor hyperphagia and fat storage. Human cohort studies, such as those from the Dutch Hunger Winter famine of 1944-45, demonstrate these effects: prenatal exposure to severe undernutrition increased risks for and , with exposed individuals showing higher body mass indices and metabolic disturbances decades later. Recent 2020s research has drawn parallels with maternal infections like , where in utero exposure correlates with elevated metabolic risks, including cardiometabolic diagnoses and predisposition by , underscoring the broader vulnerability to gestational stressors. As of 2025, research continues to evolve, with initiatives like the US DOHaD Society's annual meeting emphasizing "Beyond 1000 Days" to explore extended windows of maternal influence on .

Reversibility and Interventions

Nutritional supplementation during has shown promise in reversing certain adverse maternal effects on offspring epigenetics and development in animal models. For instance, choline supplementation in folate-deficient pregnant mice partially mitigates deficits in fetal brain neural proliferation and global by restoring one-carbon metabolism pathways. Similarly, maternal choline intake corrects growth impairments, methionine cycle disruptions, and alterations in offspring livers exposed to deficiencies. Omega-3 fatty acid supplementation, such as , attenuates neurodevelopmental changes and in rat offspring of dams fed high-fat diets, potentially by modulating and mitochondrial function in . The efficacy of interventions often depends on timing, with critical windows during determining outcomes. Periconceptional supplementation, spanning one to three months before conception through the first six weeks of , is particularly vital for preventing neural tube defects, as the closes between days 17 and 30 post-conception. Interventions outside these periods may have limited impact on early embryonic structures but can still address later developmental risks. Clinical trials have explored lifestyle interventions to mitigate maternal obesity's effects on offspring adiposity. In the Finnish Prediction and Prevention of Preeclampsia and Intrauterine Growth Restriction (PREDO) study, initiated in the 2010s, maternal early-pregnancy obesity was linked to increased offspring developmental delays, underscoring the need for preemptive strategies; related intervention trials, such as those involving dietary and exercise counseling, have demonstrated reductions in gestational weight gain and subsequent offspring fat mass at birth and early childhood. Systematic reviews of prenatal lifestyle programs confirm modest decreases in childhood overweight risk through maternal weight management. Pharmacological approaches target epigenetic modifications induced by maternal stress. (HDAC) inhibitors, when administered centrally in models, reverse altered stress responses in adult by restoring histone acetylation and in brain regions like the hippocampus, counteracting prenatal programming. Public health strategies emphasize gestational nutrition to avert Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) outcomes. The recommends antenatal counseling on balanced diets rich in s like iron, , and calcium to optimize fetal growth and reduce long-term risks of metabolic disorders in , promoting interventions like multiple supplementation in undernourished populations.

Ecological and Physiological Impacts

Effects on Offspring Immunity and Growth

Maternal antibodies play a crucial role in bolstering offspring immunity in early life across various animal . In mammals such as , these antibodies, primarily IgG, are transferred via and milk during , providing passive protection against pathogens for several weeks postnatally. In birds, IgY antibodies are deposited into the egg yolk during , conferring immunity that typically lasts 5-14 days after and enhances resistance to common infections. This maternal provisioning directly supports offspring survival by minimizing disease-related mortality during periods of immature endogenous immune systems. Maternal diet further modulates offspring immunity through vertical transmission of gut microbiota, which shapes immune development and disease susceptibility. High-fat diets (40-60% saturated fat) in pregnant and lactating rodent dams alter the offspring's gut microbiota composition, reducing beneficial taxa and increasing vulnerability to allergic conditions like anaphylaxis via dysbiosis-dependent mechanisms. Conversely, high-fiber maternal diets in mice and sows promote short-chain fatty acid-producing microbiota in offspring, which dampens allergic airway inflammation and enhances regulatory immune responses. Maternal nutritional status also profoundly influences offspring growth trajectories, often through metabolic programming. In rodent models, a high-fat maternal diet during gestation and lactation accelerates weaning weight gain, with offspring exhibiting significantly higher body mass by postnatal day 21 and elevated serum triglycerides, though this early advantage predisposes them to obesity and glucose intolerance in adulthood. Maternal protein restriction (e.g., 6-9% vs. 18% protein), however, impairs postnatal growth in mice via downregulation of the IGF-1 pathway, resulting in reduced body weight and altered insulin signaling components like IRS1 and IGF-1 receptor expression during the first three weeks of life. Specific deficiencies highlight targeted immune-growth linkages in animal studies. experiments show that maternal reprograms offspring + T cells toward a pro-inflammatory , impairing balanced T-cell development and increasing susceptibility to immune dysregulation in adulthood. These maternal effects often involve physiological trade-offs, where nutrient-rich diets drive rapid growth at the expense of immune competence. Meta-analyses of selection experiments in reveal a consistent negative association between enhanced growth rates and immune function, with lines bred for faster growth showing suppressed humoral and cellular responses, suggesting constraints amplified by maternal provisioning. Field studies in wildlife underscore these patterns, particularly in birds where maternal directly predicts offspring immune vigor. In pied flycatchers, experimentally reduced maternal foraging success—via wing handicapping—lowers prehatching investment, leading to diminished T-cell proliferative responses and overall immune capacity in nestlings. Similarly, in colonial seabirds like kittiwakes, variations in maternal foraging condition correlate with levels that influence chick immune responsiveness and early growth vigor.

Broader Ecological Consequences

Maternal effects can significantly alter by influencing traits such as sex ratios and dispersal patterns, thereby reshaping community structures. In reptiles with , climate-driven increases in incubation temperatures lead to female-biased sex ratios, potentially reducing population viability and affecting predator-prey interactions within ecosystems. For instance, in viviparous like Niveoscincus ocellatus, warmer temperatures result in female-biased litters, demonstrating how maternal thermal exposure modulates and dispersal, which in turn influences habitat occupancy and across landscapes. Similarly, in aquatic systems like those involving the Daphnia, maternal resource limitation or predation cues produce larger, more resilient that enhance population growth rates under fluctuating conditions, buffering against environmental stochasticity and altering competitive interactions in communities. Transgenerational maternal effects propagate cumulative impacts in polluted or changing environments, often leading to reduced reproductive success and population declines. In amphibians, exposure to endocrine-disrupting pollutants such as benzopyrene induces multi-generational metabolic disorders and sterility; for example, in Xenopus tropicalis, F2 progeny exhibit delayed development, fatty liver, and reproductive failure, with only 60% of females laying eggs and no viable F3 generation, contributing to broader amphibian population collapses in contaminated wetlands. These effects extend to pathogen exposure, where maternal infection in model systems like Daphnia dentifera results in offspring with 60% lower reproduction and 5.5 times higher mortality, reducing overall host density by 30% and infection prevalence by 22% in simulated populations. Conservation efforts must account for maternal stress in endangered species, as it diminishes population viability and recruitment. In coral reef ecosystems, maternal thermal stress from bleaching events impairs offspring performance; corals with bleached parents produce larvae with lower survivorship, disrupting fish recruitment and altering trophic structures, as seen in studies where non-bleached parental corals yield 20-30% higher offspring survival rates. For instance, in reef fish like pomacentrids, stressed mothers generate more active juveniles with heightened predation risk, reducing recruitment success by up to 50% and threatening biodiversity in warming oceans. Eco-evolutionary models reveal that maternal effects accelerate rates in dynamic environments by generating heritable phenotypic variance. Quantitative genetic models show positive maternal-offspring covariances (e.g., +1.25 for litter size in red squirrels) enhance evolutionary responses to selection, enabling populations to track environmental changes 10-20% faster than genetic effects alone. Matrix population models further demonstrate that maternal —declining offspring quality with maternal age—evolves under antagonistic , reducing fitness by 15-25% in aging cohorts and influencing long-term population stability. Recent research from the 2020s highlights how maternal heat exposure under reduces insect fitness, cascading through food webs. In bumblebees (), maternal provisioning under elevated temperatures (33°C) during development yields adults with impaired efficiency, decreasing visitation rates by 40% and collection, which disrupts and dynamics in agricultural ecosystems. These transgenerational thermal effects exacerbate declines, potentially reducing crop yields by 10-20% and altering community compositions in warming habitats.

References

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