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6 May 2021 How family histories can inform research about germ cell exposures: the example of autism
Jill Escher
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Abstract

Throughout the scientific literature, heritable traits are routinely presumed to be genetic in origin. However, as emerging evidence from the realms of genetic toxicology and epigenomics demonstrate, heritability may be better understood as encompassing not only DNA sequence passed down through generations, but also disruptions to the parental germ cells causing de novo mutations or epigenetic alterations, with subsequent shifts in gene expression and functions in offspring. The Beyond Genes conference highlighted advances in understanding these aspects at molecular, experimental, and epidemiological levels. In this commentary I suggest that future research on this topic could be inspired by collecting parents' germ cell exposure histories, with particular attention to cases of families with multiple children suffering idiopathic disorders. In so doing I focus on the endpoint of autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). Rates of this serious neurodevelopment disability have climbed around the world, a growing crisis that cannot be explained by diagnostic shifts. ASD's strong heritability has prompted a research program largely focused on DNA sequencing to locate rare and common variants, but decades of this gene-focused research have revealed surprisingly little about the molecular origins of the disorder. Based on my experience as the mother of two children with idiopathic autism, and as a research philanthropist and autism advocate, I suggest ways researchers might probe parental germ cell exposure histories to develop new hypotheses that may ultimately reveal sources of nongenetic heritability in a subset of idiopathic heritable pathologies.

Summary sentence

As heritable idiopathic disorders like autism surge in prevalence, it behooves researchers to investigate parental germ cell exposure history for clues. Multiplex families offer an opportunity to spot hypotheses beyond the confines of traditional genetics.

© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for the Study of Reproduction. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com
Jill Escher "How family histories can inform research about germ cell exposures: the example of autism," Biology of Reproduction 105(3), 767-773, (6 May 2021). https://doi.org/10.1093/biolre/ioab092
Received: 2 March 2021; Accepted: 30 April 2021; Published: 6 May 2021
KEYWORDS
autism spectrum disorder
DNA damage
endocrine disrupting chemicals
epigenetics
general anesthesia
genetic toxicology
germ cells
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