Medaka as a model for studying environmentally induced epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of phenotypes

Environ Epigenet. 2016 Jan 30;2(1):dvv010. doi: 10.1093/eep/dvv010. eCollection 2016 Jan.

Abstract

Ability of environmental stressors to induce transgenerational diseases has been experimentally demonstrated in plants, worms, fish, and mammals, indicating that exposures affect not only human health but also fish and ecosystem health. Small aquarium fish have been reliable model to study genetic and epigenetic basis of development and disease. Additionally, fish can also provide better, economic opportunity to study transgenerational inheritance of adverse health and epigenetic mechanisms. Molecular mechanisms underlying germ cell development in fish are comparable to those in mammals and humans. This review will provide a short overview of long-term effects of environmental chemical contaminant exposure in various models, associated epigenetic mechanisms, and a perspective on fish as model to study environmentally induced transgenerational inheritance of altered phenotypes.

Keywords: environmental endocrine disrupting chemicals; epigenetics; fish; transgenerational inheritance.

Publication types

  • Review