The Guardian (USA)

Pioneering study finds generation­al link between smoking and body fat

- Steven Morris

Women and girls whose grandfathe­rs or great-grandfathe­rs began smoking at an early age tend to have more body fat, research that taps into the extraordin­ary 30-year-old Children of the 90s study has found.

In an earlier piece of work it was discovered that if a father started smoking regularly before reaching puberty, then his sons, but not daughters, had more body fat than expected.

Now researcher­s believe they have pinpointed higher body fat in females with grandfathe­rs or great-grandfathe­rs who began smoking before the age 13. No effects were observed in male descendant­s.

The research suggests exposure to substances can lead to changes that may be passed through the generation­s, though the team behind the research concede that much more work is needed to confirm this and understand how it may happen.

They have been able to spot the possible link because of the detail and depth of inter-generation­al data the University of Bristol study provides and it is an example of findings that the scientists could not have anticipate­d when it was launched in 1991.

Prof Jean Golding, the founder of Children of the 90s and lead author of the latest report, praised the participan­ts in the study – an original cohort of 14,000 pregnant women who agreed to take part plus, now, their children and grandchild­ren.

Other pieces of research over the decades that could not have been foreseen include the finding 20 years ago that women who eat oily fish during pregnancy, even only once every two weeks, have children with sharper eyesight. This was believed to be the first time diet in pregnancy was shown to be associated with a child’s visual developmen­t. A study published in 2013 concluded that iodine deficiency in pregnancy could have an adverse effect on children’s mental developmen­t. The discovery was made possible because the study had urine samples from early in participan­ts’ pregnancie­s and detailed records of what the expectant mothers were eating.

Yet another finding was that early signs of a genetic liability to Type 2 diabetes could be spotted in children as young as eight and a link was also made between peanut allergies and skin cream containing peanut oil. The Children of the 90s project has even allowed experts to examine how wounds heal by looking at participan­ts’ BCG vaccine scars.

For the latest study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, researcher­s dug into data on the smoking experience­s of grandfathe­rs and great-grandfathe­rs. They could not look into the smoking of grandmothe­rs and great-grandmothe­rs as so few smoked, but were confident they would have reasonably reliable data from the male side of the family because they were likely to boast about smoking at a very young age.

Golding said: “This research provides us with two important results. First, that before puberty, exposure of a boy to particular substances might have an effect on generation­s that follow him. Second, one of the reasons why children become overweight may be not so much to do with their current diet and exercise, rather than the lifestyle of their ancestors or the persistenc­e of associated factors over the years.”

Golding said animal experiment­s had shown that exposure of males to certain chemicals before breeding can have effects on their offspring but there has been doubt as to whether this phenomena is present in humans.

“If these associatio­ns are confirmed in other datasets, this will be one of the first human studies with data suitable to start to look at these associatio­ns and to begin to unpick the origin of potentiall­y important cross-generation relationsh­ips. There is a heck of a lot more to discover,” Golding said.

 ?? ?? The research suggests exposure to substances can lead to changes that may be passed through the generation­s. Photograph: UK Stock Images Ltd/Alamy
The research suggests exposure to substances can lead to changes that may be passed through the generation­s. Photograph: UK Stock Images Ltd/Alamy

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