This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
News

Fathers pass depression to offspring
through behavior, not genetics

  • “It appears from our results that depression is passed on not through sperm primarily, but through behavioral mechanisms.”

    David Dietz
    Assistant Professor of Pharmacology and Toxicology
By ELLEN GOLDBAUM
Published: November 21, 2011

One of the first studies to examine, in animals, how depression in fathers may impact their offspring was presented by the study’s researchers from UB and Mt. Sinai School of Medicine last week at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience.

A key purpose of the experiments was to determine if depressive-like behaviors in mice could be passed from one generation to the next. The authors also attempted to examine if epigenetics—changes in the genome of an organism caused by something other than changes in DNA sequences—might play a role in inheriting depression.

“It appears from our results that depression is passed on not through sperm primarily, but through behavioral mechanisms,” says David Dietz, assistant professor of pharmacology and toxicology in the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and co-author of the study.

The researchers used a rodent model of depression, studying male mice who had been “socially defeated” through exposure to chronic stress.

When those males bred offspring through natural methods, their offspring did show a susceptibility to exhibit depressive symptoms, such as social avoidance.

However, when offspring were bred from these fathers through in vitro fertilization (IVF) and the fathers had no direct contact with the offspring or with the mothers, the susceptibility of the offspring to show depressive-like symptoms was greatly reduced.

“With the offspring of the IVF experiments, you definitely lost the very robust transmission of depression-like behaviors that we saw in the group bred through natural methods,” says Dietz.

The research previously was published in the Journal of Biological Psychiatry by Dietz and his co-authors from the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine and Utrecht University in the Netherlands.

The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health.