Abstract
BackgroundOver the last few decades, we increasingly see examples of parental environmental experiences influencing offspring health and fitness. More recently, it has become clear that some non-genetic effects can be conferred across multiple generations. This topic has attracted research from a diversity of disciplines such as toxicology, biomedical sciences, and ecology, due to its importance for environmental and health issues, as well as ecological and evolutionary processes, with implications for environmental policies. The rapid accumulation of primary research has enabled researchers to perform systematic reviews (SRs), including meta-analyses, to investigate the generality of and sources of variation in non-genetic effects. However, different disciplines ask different questions and SRs can vary substantially in scope, quality, and terminology usage. This diversity in SRs makes it difficult to assess broad patterns of non-genetic effects across disciplines as well as determine common areas of interest and gaps in the literature. To clarify research patterns within the SR literature on non-genetic inheritance, we plan to create a map of systematic reviews as well as conduct bibliometric mapping (referred to as ‘research weaving’). We will address four key questions: first, what are the broad research patterns unifying the SR literature on non-genetic inheritance across disciplines? Second, are there discipline-specific research patterns, including terminology use, between disciplines? Third, how are authors of the SR literature connected? Fourth, what is the reliability of the SR literature?MethodsWe will systematically collect reviews within the SR ‘family’ that examine non-genetic inheritance arising from parental and ancestral environment by searching databases for journal articles and grey literature, as well as conducting backwards and forwards searching. Search hits will be double screened using ‘decision trees’ that represent the inclusion criteria. All relevant data elements on the review’s topic, as well as a critical appraisal of the review’s approach and reporting, will be extracted into Excel flat sheets. Bibliometric data will be directly extracted from Scopus. We will then query all relevant data elements to address our objectives and present outcomes in easily interpretable tables and figures, accompanied by a narrative description of results.
Highlights
Over the last few decades, we increasingly see examples of parental environmental experiences influencing offspring health and fitness
Non-genetic inheritance associated with differences in parental environment is known to be widespread and diverse: from the impacts of the “Dutch Hunger Winter” on offspring metabolism and health [1] to the effects of climate on offspring physiology and behaviour [2]
Many non-genetic effects are due to maternal provisioning to Macartney et al Environ Evid (2021) 10:31 the developing embryo [3], but both maternal and paternal environment can induce changes in epigenetic factors associated with the germline, altering gene-expression in the following generation [4,5,6]
Summary
We have adhered to the RepOrting standards for Systematic Evidence Syntheses for systematic map protocols in environmental research (ROSES) [26] (shown in Additional file 1: Appendix S1). Program*"[Title/Abstract]) OR (DOHAD[Title/Abstract]) OR (*maternal*[Title/Abstract]) OR (*paternal*[Title/ Abstract]) OR (*parental*[Title/Abstract]) OR (transgeneration*[Title/Abstract]) OR (multi-generation*[Title/ Abstract]) OR (inter-generation*[Title/Abstract]) OR (across-generation*[Title/Abstract]) OR (betweengeneration*[Title/Abstract]) OR (transgeneration*[Title/ Abstract]) OR (multigeneration*[Title/Abstract]) OR (intergeneration*[Title/Abstract]) OR (epigenet* [Title/ Abstract]) Filters: Meta-Analysis, Systematic Review, Other Animals This search string resulted in 652 hits on Scopus, 816 hits on Web of Science, 280 hits on PubMed and captures all 9 of our preselected benchmark papers (i.e., a validation set used to assess sensitivity of our search and benchmark papers (test set) which are listed in Additional file 2: Appendix S2). All limitations of our approach and data will be acknowledged and discussed
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