Developmental plasticity and epigenetic mechanisms underpinning metabolic and cardiovascular diseases

Author:

Low Felicia M1,Gluckman Peter D2,Hanson Mark A3

Affiliation:

1. Liggins Institute, The University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland 1142, New Zealand

2. Singapore Institute for Clinical Sciences, A*STAR, Singapore.

3. Institute of Developmental Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

Abstract

The importance of developmental factors in influencing the risk of later-life disease has a strong evidence base derived from multiple epidemiological, clinical and experimental studies in animals and humans. During early life, an organism is able to adjust its phenotypic development in response to environmental cues. Such developmentally plastic responses evolved as a fitness-maximizing strategy to cope with variable environments. There are now increasing data that these responses are, at least partially, underpinned by epigenetic mechanisms. A mismatch between the early and later-life environments may lead to inappropriate early life-course epigenomic changes that manifest in later life as increased vulnerability to disease. There is also growing evidence for the transgenerational transmission of epigenetic marks. This article reviews the evidence that susceptibility to metabolic and cardiovascular disease in humans is linked to changes in epigenetic marks induced by early-life environmental cues, and discusses the clinical, public health and therapeutic implications that arise.

Publisher

Future Medicine Ltd

Subject

Cancer Research,Genetics

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