PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

WSU study finds dioxin causes disease and reproductive problems across generations

Effects could extend to 'great-grandchildren'

2012-09-27
(Press-News.org) PULLMAN, Wash.—Since the 1960s, when the defoliant Agent Orange was widely used in Vietnam, military, industry and environmental groups have debated the toxicity of its main ingredient, the chemical dioxin, and how it should be regulated.

But even if all the dioxin were eliminated from the planet, Washington State University researchers say its legacy will live on in the way it turns genes on and off in the descendants of people exposed over the past half century.

Writing in the journal PLoS ONE, biologist Michael Skinner and members of his lab say dioxin administered to pregnant rats resulted in a variety of reproductive problems and disease in subsequent generations. The first generation of rats had prostate disease, polycystic ovarian disease and fewer ovarian follicles, the structures that contain eggs. To the surprise of Skinner and his colleagues, the third generation had even more dramatic incidences of ovarian disease and, in males, kidney disease.

"Therefore, it is not just the individuals exposed, but potentially the great-grandchildren that may experience increased adult-onset disease susceptibility," says Skinner.

Skinner is a professor of reproductive biology and environmental epigenetics - the process in which environmental factors affect how genes are turned on and off in the offspring of an exposed animal, even though its DNA sequences remain unchanged. In this year alone, Skinner and colleagues have published studies finding epigenetic diseases promoted by jet fuel and other hydrocarbon mixtures, plastics, pesticides and fungicides, as well as dioxin.

The field of epigenetics opens new ground in the study of how diseases and reproductive problems develop. While toxicologists generally focus on animals exposed to a compound, work in Skinner's lab further demonstrates that diseases can also stem from older, ancestral exposures that are then mediated through epigenetic changes in sperm. INFORMATION:

This latest study was funded by the U.S. Department of Defense, the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. Skinner designed the study; the research was done by Assistant Research Professor Mohan Manikkam, Research Technician Rebecca Tracey and Post-doctoral Researcher Carlos Guerrero-Bosagna.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Inadequate cellular rest may explain effects of aging on muscles

2012-09-27
Is aging inevitable? What factors make older tissues in the human body less able to maintain and repair themselves, as in the weakening and shrinkage of aging muscles in humans? A new study from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators and collaborators at King's College London describes the mechanism behind impaired muscle repair during aging and a strategy that may help rejuvenate aging tissue by manipulating the environment in which muscle stem cells reside. The report will appear in the journal Nature and has received advance online release. Rare muscle ...

Gut bacteria could cause diabetes

2012-09-27
VIDEO: Studying gut bacteria can reveal a range of human illness. Now, new research shows that the composition of a person’s intestinal bacteria could play an important role in the development... Click here for more information. The number of people suffering from type 2 diabetes world-wide has risen rapidly in recent years, and scientists estimate that just as many people could be suffering from the illness without realising it. New research now indicates that your gut bacteria ...

New AACAP Practice Parameter on gay, lesbian, bisexual, and gender variant issues

2012-09-27
Washington D.C., September 26, 2012 – The American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP) is proud to announce its new Practice Parameter on issues related to and affecting gay, lesbian, bisexual, and gender variant youth. Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and gender variant children and adolescents face unique developmental challenges and stressors that can influence their mental health and wellbeing. Social issues such as stigma, bullying, and discrimination, and personal factors like internalized prejudice and feelings of being different are just a few of the concerns ...

BGI presents a metagenome-wide association study of gut microbiota in type 2 diabetes

2012-09-27
September 26, 2012, Shenzhen, China – BGI announces the online publication in the international journal Nature of a novel metagenomic study on human gut microbiota and their potential impact on type 2 diabetes (T2D), the most common form of diabetes. This work lays an important foundation for comprehensively understanding the genetic characteristics of gut microbiota and their relationship to T2D risk, as well as providing a new way of classifying microbes detected by DNA sequence. The work here also opens the way for transferring the potential value of a gut-microbiota-based ...

UF biologist discovers mammal with salamander-like regenerative abilities

2012-09-27
GAINESVILLE, Fla. --- A small African mammal with an unusual ability to regrow damaged tissues could inspire new research in regenerative medicine, a University of Florida study finds. For years biologists have studied salamanders for their ability to regrow lost limbs. But amphibian biology is very different than human biology, so lessons learned in laboratories from salamanders are difficult to translate into medical therapies for humans. New research in the Sept. 27 issue of the journal Nature describes a mammal that can regrow new body tissues following an injury. ...

MBARI researchers discover what vampire squids eat

2012-09-27
MOSS LANDING, CA — About 100 years ago, marine biologists hauled the first vampire squid up from the depths of the sea. Since that time, perhaps a dozen scientific papers have been published on this mysterious animal, but no one has been able to figure out exactly what it eats. A new paper by MBARI Postdoctoral Fellow Henk-Jan Hoving and Senior Scientist Bruce Robison shows for the first time that, unlike its relatives the octopuses and squids, which eat live prey, the vampire squid uses two thread-like filaments to capture bits of organic debris that sink down from the ...

Making the healthy choice

Making the healthy choice
2012-09-27
PASADENA, Calif.—Almost everyone knows the feeling: you see a delicious piece of chocolate cake on the table, but as you grab your fork, you think twice. The cake is too fattening and unhealthy, you tell yourself. Maybe you should skip dessert. But the cake still beckons. In order to make the healthy choice, we often have to engage in this kind of internal struggle. Now, scientists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have identified the neural processes at work during such self-regulation—and what determines whether you eat the cake. "We seem to ...

Researchers determine how inflammatory cells function, setting stage for future remedies

2012-09-27
A research team led by investigators at New York University and NYU School of Medicine has determined how cells that cause inflammatory ailments, such as Crohn's disease, multiple sclerosis, and arthritis, differentiate from stem cells and ultimately affect the clinical outcome of these diseases. "We've found that hundreds of new genes are involved in the function and development of these cells," said co-author Richard Bonneau, an associate professor at New York University's Center for Genomics and Systems Biology and the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. "This ...

Artificially intelligent game bots pass the Turing test on Turing's centenary

Artificially intelligent game bots pass the Turing test on Turings centenary
2012-09-27
VIDEO: Under heavy fire from a human judge, UT^2 manages to fight his way to a nearby weapon and obliterate his opponent. Click here for more information. AUSTIN, Texas — An artificially intelligent virtual gamer created by computer scientists at The University of Texas at Austin has won the BotPrize by convincing a panel of judges that it was more human-like than half the humans it competed against. The competition was sponsored by 2K Games and was set inside the virtual ...

Hurricane Irene polluted Catskills watershed

2012-09-27
New Haven, Conn.— The water quality of lakes and coastal systems will be altered if hurricanes intensify in a warming world, according to a Yale study in Geophysical Research Letters. Bryan Yoon, the study's co-author and a doctoral student at the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies, found that last summer during Hurricane Irene — the worst storm in the New York area in 200 years — record amounts of dissolved organic matter darkened Catskill waters and affected the Ashokan Reservoir that supplies New York City with drinking water. "This is the biggest rain ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Prenatal exposure to air pollution is associated with lower cognitive performance in early childhood

AI learns better when it talks to itself

96% accurate footprint tracker for tiny mammals could help reveal ecosystem health

Balancing comfort and sustainability with climate-tailored housing

Not just sweet: the sugar branches that shape the brain

Spectral slimming for single-nanoparticle plasmons

Exploring the scientific connotation of the medicinal properties of toad venom (Chansu) — 'dispersing fire stagnation and opening orifices to awaken the spirit' — from the microscopic world of 5-HTR d

How early-career English language teachers can grow professionally, despite all odds

Achieving Ah‑level Zn–MnO2 pouch cells via interfacial solvation structure engineering

Rational electrolyte structure engineering for highly reversible zinc metal anode in aqueous batteries

Common environmental chemical found to disrupt hormones and implantation

Nitrate in drinking water linked to increased dementia risk while nitrate from vegetables is linked to a lower risk, researchers find  

Smoke from wildfires linked to 17,000 strokes in the US alone

Air frying fatty food better for air quality than alternatives – if you clean it, study says

Most common methods of inducing labour similarly effective

Global health impacts of plastics systems could double by 2040

Low-cost system turns smartphones into emergency radiation detectors

Menopause linked to loss of grey matter in the brain, poorer mental health and sleep disturbance

New expert guidelines standardize diagnosis and monitoring of canine dementia

Study links salty drinking water to higher blood pressure, especially in coastal areas

Study reveals struggles precede psychosis risk by years, suggesting prevention opportunities

Nearly half of CDC surveillance databases have halted updates, raising concerns about health data gaps

Study compares ways to support opioid deprescribing in primary care

Primary care home visits for older adults declined after payment policy changes and COVID-19 in Ontario, Canada

Linking financial incentives to improved blood sugar levels may support type 2 diabetes management

Care continuity linked to fewer hospital visits for older adults receiving home-based care

Produce prescriptions improve nutrition for medicaid patients with diabetes

CRISP translation guide enables translating research-reporting guidelines across languages

How patients value visit type, speed of care, and continuity in primary care

Systems-level approach in primary care improves alcohol screening, counseling, and pregnancy-intention records

[Press-News.org] WSU study finds dioxin causes disease and reproductive problems across generations
Effects could extend to 'great-grandchildren'