高雄市生物科技發展協會|http://www.khba.org.tw
會員登入
記住帳號 自動登入
會員名錄
各式辦法
下載專區
留言板
您目前的位置:首頁 / 活動與新訊
Mice that Survive Infection Pass on Stronger Immunit
活動日期:2021.10.20
2021.10.20  

Mice that Survive Infection Pass on Stronger Immunit

Offspring of animals subjected to a real or simulated pathogen were more able to fend off disease, a study finds

David Adam
Oct 18, 2021

https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/mice-that-survive-infection-pass-on-stronger-immunity-69324

 

Mice that recover from infection can pass on stronger immunity to their future pups, according to a new study that expands the known effects of epigenetics in mammals.  

“We wanted to test if we could observe the inheritance of some traits to subsequent generations, let’s say independent of natural selection,” says Jorge Dominguez-Andres, an immunologist at Radboud University Nijmegen Centre in the Netherlands and coauthor on the study. “And what we observed is that the offspring of the mice that had survived infection were more resistant to infections.” 

Transgenerational transmission of traits related to the immune system have been seen before in plants, birds, and invertebrates, including flies, beetles, and worms. To test whether a similar mechanism operates in mammals, Dominguez-Andres and his colleagues exposed adult mice to infectious fungi or zymosan, particles made from yeast used to stimulate the immune system. When either parent was subjected to the real or simulated infection, the offspring showed a stronger immune response to potential pathogens, including E. coli bacteria, than controls whose parents hadn’t been subjected to an immune system challenge. They had lower numbers of the bacteria in their lungs and liver, as well as higher concentrations of immune cells and pro-inflammatory cytokines. The effect persisted further: offspring of these second-generation mice also showed a lower bacterial burden after infection. 

“I’m really curious to see how the scientific community sees this paper. I’m sure there’ll be some criticism,” says Dominguez-Andres. The new paper was only accepted for publication after the authors replicated the experiments, originally conducted at the University of Athens, in a separate lab at University Hospital in Lausanne, Switzerland.   

The study, published today in Nature Immunology, could raise hackles because it references Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, a French naturalist who proposed that organisms pass to offspring those characteristics acquired during their lifetimes. So, for example, a giraffe that constantly stretched its neck muscles to reach high leaves would pass on a longer neck. Lamarckism is often framed as a competitor to Darwin’s theory of natural selection.  

The authors write in the paper: “Our data suggest the existence of Lamarckian mechanisms modulating immunological traits over generations that may cause evolutionary advantages.” 

“This should be subject to much more research in different places with different strains of mice grown under different conditions,” Dominguez-Andres says. “Probably the results might differ in different settings. But we are confident and convinced that this would be reproduced with other types of mice and other species of pathogens.”  

In the meantime, “I think it looks convincing,” says Oded Rechavi, a neurobiologist at Tel Aviv University who studies transgenerational inheritance and was not involved in the study. “You can see that they did multiple different techniques and checked it from many different directions.” 

Deepshika Ramanan, a microbiologist who studies the nongenetic transfer of immunological traits at Harvard Medical School and who also did not participate in the study, agrees: “It’s not a farfetched idea because it does happen in insects and birds and so on.” 

One weakness of the study, she says, is that the results do not clearly show how the enhanced immunity is being transferred from parent to offspring.  

Tests on offspring mice showed the stronger response to infection was associated with altered patterns of gene expression in myeloid cells in the bone marrow, which are known to be important for a phenomenon known as trained immunity, in which the innate immune system develops a “memory” of pathogens to boost future responses. 

That does not explain how the mice passed on trained immunity to offspring who had never directly experienced infection. The study did find that fungal infection induced changes in sperm DNA methylation, an epigenetic process that can alter how genes are expressed in offspring.  

But Ramanan points out that female mice who recovered from infection in the study also produced offspring with fortified immune systems. “They say it’s through the sperm, but I feel like there still needs to be more work on how mothers are transmitting it,” she says. 

Dominguez-Andres says his group is now working to try to better understand the epigenetic mechanism involved. They also plan new experiments to check on whether the age of the mice when they are exposed matters, and if parents’ infections affect aging and inflammation in offspring mice. “And, of course, to what extent does this happen in humans.”

共有310筆資料 頁數: 第11頁(共16頁)
編號 標題 新增日期
1 外食易致脂肪肝 在家開伙食安心 2014.06.18
2 Prevention: Air of danger 2014.05.29
3 喝酒易臉紅 罹食道癌風險高14倍 2014.05.29
4 A Shaky New Age 2014.04.07
5 春節急診人擠人 止痛感冒藥熱賣 2014.02.06
6 未來20年 癌症將肆虐全球 2014.02.05
7 飛彈防禦系統變膠囊 腸癌現形 2014.02.05
8 多吃糖 真要命! 2014.02.05
9 香港回收三款银翘解毒类产品 2014.02.05
10 CytRx Corporation Poised For Success In 2014 2014.01.07
11 健康殺手 老人缺牙 傷身害命 2013.10.23
12 FDA:輝瑞抗生素增死亡風險 2013.09.30
13 Inducing Pluripotency Every Time 2013.09.26
14 Is This the Beginning of the End for Alzheimer's? 2013.05.30
15 High doses of common painkillers increase heart attack risks 2013.05.30
16 藥價比天高 百名癌醫站起來 2013.05.02
17 經策會資訊:中華電信第二梯次報名 2013.04.30
18 兩篇Science文章:遏制腫瘤生長的新武器—20130408 2013.04.09
19 Bones Get in Her Eyes 2013.01.23
20 第68届API CHINA 2012 中國國際原料藥展(秋​季.. 2012.05.17
上一頁  1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16  下一頁
版權所有©2006 高雄市生物科技發展協會 所有文字、資料禁止轉用
地址:高雄市中正一路120號14樓之3 TEL:(07)591-9569 / FAX:(07)591-9018 / e-mail: khba.tw@gmail.com
累積進站人數:2897302