Studies find genetic, epigenetic, and transgenerational effects from pesticide exposure, particularly during early life.
One toxic exposure during pregnancy may affect health for up to 20 generations and could help explain rising chronic disease rates.
A new study from Washington State University reports that a single pregnancy exposure to a toxic fungicide can raise disease ...
Researchers found that rats exposed in the womb to a fungicide passed increased risks of kidney, prostate, ovarian, and birth ...
A single exposure to a toxic fungicide during pregnancy can increase epigenetic disease risk for 20 subsequent generations.
A single exposure to a toxic fungicide during pregnancy can increase the risk of disease for 20 subsequent generations—with inherited health problems worsening many generations after exposure. Those ...
The latest study from the Sharma Lab makes the mechanisms of how epigenetic information is established in sperm cells, and how that encoding affects offspring health, a little less of a scientific ...
Researchers studied rats exposed to a fungicide used primarily in fruit crops and found that a heightened prevalence of disease persisted through 20 generations.
As the climate crisis intensifies, traditional genetic breeding alone may not keep pace with the rapid shifts in environmental stressors. While the ...
The COVID-19 pandemic gave us tremendous perspective on how wildly symptoms and outcomes can vary between patients experiencing the same infection. How can two people infected by the same pathogen ...