Hate your hair? Blame mom's diet, study says.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) --
In a study that shows more than ever you are
what you eat, scientists said on Friday they had changed the coat colors of baby
mice simply by altering their mothers' diets.
The study shows that common nutrients can influence which genes turn on and off
in a developing fetus, and help explain some of the factors that decide which
genes "express" and which remain silent.
Writing in Friday's issue of the journal Molecular and Cellular Biology, the
scientists at Duke University Medical Center said they changed the color of baby
mouse fur by feeding pregnant mice four supplements --
Vitamin B12,
Folic acid, choline and betaine.
Mice given the four supplements gave birth to babies predominantly with brown
coats. Pregnant mice not fed the supplements gave birth mostly to babies with
yellow coats.
Careful study showed the extra nutrients turned down expression of a gene called
Agouti, which affects fur color.
"We have long known that maternal nutrition profoundly impacts disease
susceptibility in their offspring, but we never understood the cause-and-effect
link," said Randy Jirtle, a professor of radiation oncology at Duke who directed
the study.
"For the first time ever, we have shown precisely how nutritional
supplementation to the mother can permanently alter gene expression in her
offspring without altering the genes themselves," he said in a statement.
The findings have not been shown in humans, but the researchers said there is
much support for the idea that nutrition can affect gene expression in people.
Several studies have shown, for instance, that women who eat a poor diet while
pregnant have children who grow up with a tendency to diabetes and heart
disease.
Obesity, diabetes link
This study could help explain that. The Agouti gene not only affects coat color,
but also metabolic factors involved in diabetes and heart disease.
Mice with overactive Agouti genes tend to be obese and susceptible to diabetes
because the protein controlled by the gene affects one brain signal involved in
appetite.
"Diet, nutritional supplements and other seemingly innocuous compounds can alter
the development in utero to such an extent that it changes the offspring's
characteristics for life, and potentially that of future generations," said
researcher Rob Waterland, who worked on the study.
Nutrition is likely to be one of the "environmental factors" that decides which
genes turn on and which stay silent.
Everyone inherits two copies of each gene -- one from each parent. For most
functions, only one gene expresses while the other is silent.
This idea, first explained by 19th century genetic pioneer Gregor Mendel with
his experiments on green and yellow peas, can explain why two brown-eyed parents
can have a blue-eyed child -- who may be expressing a grandparents' gene that
was silent in the parent.
"Our study demonstrates how early environmental factors can alter gene
expression without mutating the gene itself," said Waterland said.
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