Înapoi la știri

WSU study finds father’s health before conception may affect future children - KOMO

1 oră în urmă
3 minute min
Simona Stan
A father's health before conception may play a role in the future health of his children, according to new research from Washington State University. The study helps answer a long-standing question about how a father's diet, metabolism, and overall health can influence the next generation. Scientists have known for years that factors such as obesity, poor diet, and metabolic disease in fathers can increase the risk of metabolic problems in their children. What has been less clear is how that information is carried in sperm and passed along. Researchers at WSU found evidence suggesting the process begins in the testis, where sperm are produced, rather than later as sperm mature and travel through the male reproductive tract. "We wanted to understand where that heritable information comes from, if a father's metabolic condition can affect his offspring," said Wei Yan, director of the WSU School of Molecular Biosciences and the study's senior author. The research challenges a theory that sperm mitochondria, the structures that produce energy in cells, play a major role in transmitting that information. The team found mature mouse sperm contain very little mitochondrial DNA, making that explanation unlikely. Instead, the findings suggest the biological information linked to a father's metabolic health is established earlier during sperm development. To reach that conclusion, researchers used a laboratory technique called intracytoplasmic sperm injection, or ICSI, which allowed them to compare sperm taken directly from the testis with sperm collected later in the reproductive process. The researchers found that sperm taken directly from the testis could still pass diet-related metabolic traits to offspring. That finding supports the idea that the information originates before sperm leave the testis. Yan said the results shift attention to an earlier stage of sperm development and provide new insight into how a father's health may influence the next generation. Researchers emphasized that the findings do not mean children are destined to develop metabolic disease. Instead, the study identifies one possible biological pathway that could affect disease risk. Yan said a better understanding of paternal health could help inform future efforts focused on prevention, reproductive health, and early-life disease risk. The findings also suggest that improving a father's health before conception could potentially benefit both fathers and their future children. The study reflects a growing focus on the role fathers play in reproductive health, an area that has traditionally centered on maternal health.
Alte postari din Sanatate
Sanatate

Naked mole-rats age so slowly, resist cancer so well and survive oxygen loss so strangely that researchers now study them as one of nature’s best clues to human ageing. - Space Daily

The naked mole-rat is a small, hairless, more or less blind rodent that lives in colonies under the deserts of East Africa. By Space Daily Editorial Team · Editorial process The naked mole-rat is a small, hairless, more or less blind rodent that lives in colonies under the deserts of East Africa.

Sanatate

Familia din Somerville se află în carantină după o expunere la pojar la Logan

Două copii mici, care nu sunt complet imunizați împotriva pojarului, se află în carantină la Somerville împreună cu familia lor, după ce au fost expuși virusului la Aeroportul Logan la începutul acestei luni, a declarat tatăl lor. Potrivit bostonglobe.com, familia este în carantină de mai bine de o săptămână, după ce a aflat că au fost expuși la pojar într-un zbor JetBlue Airways care transporta un pasager infectat.

Acasa Recente Radio Județe