Author:
Dickinson H.,Moss T. J.,Gatford K. L.,Moritz K. M.,Akison L.,Fullston T.,Hryciw D. H.,Maloney C. A.,Morris M. J.,Wooldridge A. L.,Schjenken J. E.,Robertson S. A.,Waddell B. J.,Mark P. J.,Wyrwoll C. S.,Ellery S. J.,Thornburg K. L.,Muhlhausler B. S.,Morrison J. L.
Abstract
Epidemiology formed the basis of ‘the Barker hypothesis’, the concept of ‘developmental programming’ and today’s discipline of the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD). Animal experimentation provided proof of the underlying concepts, and continues to generate knowledge of underlying mechanisms. Interventions in humans, based on DOHaD principles, will be informed by experiments in animals. As knowledge in this discipline has accumulated, from studies of humans and other animals, the complexity of interactions between genome, environment and epigenetics, has been revealed. The vast nature of programming stimuli and breadth of effects is becoming known. As a result of our accumulating knowledge we now appreciate the impact of many variables that contribute to programmed outcomes. To guide further animal research in this field, the Australia and New Zealand DOHaD society (ANZ DOHaD) Animals Models of DOHaD Research Working Group convened at the 2nd Annual ANZ DOHaD Congress in Melbourne, Australia in April 2015. This review summarizes the contributions of animal research to the understanding of DOHaD, and makes recommendations for the design and conduct of animal experiments to maximize relevance, reproducibility and translation of knowledge into improving health and well-being.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
95 articles.
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