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When a man is traumatised changes occur in his sperm which are passed on to his children
The children of people who have experienced extremely traumatic events are more likely to develop mental health problems.
And new research shows this is because experiencing trauma leads to changes in the sperm.
These  changes can cause a man’s children to develop bipolar disorder and are  so strong they can even influence the man’s grandchildren.
Psychologists  have long known that traumatic experiences can induce behavioural  disorders that are passed down from one generation to the next.
However, they are only just beginning to understand how this happens.
Researchers  at the University of Zurich and ETH Zurich now think they have come one  step closer to understanding how the effects of traumas can be passed  down the generations.
The  researchers found that short RNA molecules – molecules that perform a  wide range of vital roles in the body - are made from DNA by enzymes  that read specific sections of the DNA and use them as template to  produce corresponding RNAs. 
Other enzymes then trim these RNAs into mature forms. 
Cells naturally contain a large number of different short RNA molecules called microRNAs. 
They have regulatory functions, such as controlling how many copies of a particular protein are made.
The  researchers studied the number and kind of microRNAs expressed by adult  mice exposed to traumatic conditions in early life and compared them  with non-traumatised mice. They  discovered that traumatic stress alters the amount of several microRNAs  in the blood, brain and sperm – while some microRNAs were produced in  excess, others were lower than in the corresponding tissues or cells of  control animals. 
These alterations resulted in misregulation of cellular processes normally controlled by these microRNAs.
After traumatic experiences, the mice  behaved markedly differently - they partly lost their natural aversion  to open spaces and bright light and showed symptoms of depression. 
Men who have experienced traumatic events are more likely to have children with mental health problems
These  behavioural symptoms were also transferred to the next generation via  sperm, even though the offspring were not exposed to any traumatic  stress themselves.
The  metabolisms of the offspring of stressed mice were also impaired -  their insulin and blood sugar levels were lower than in the offspring of  non-traumatised parents. 
‘We  were able to demonstrate for the first time that traumatic experiences  affect metabolism in the long-term and that these changes are  hereditary,’ said Professor Isabelle Mansuy. 
‘With the imbalance in microRNAs in sperm, we have discovered a key factor through which trauma can be passed on.’
However, certain questions remain open, such as how the dysregulation in short RNAs comes about. 
Professor  Mansuy said: ‘Most likely, it is part of a chain of events that begins  with the body producing too many stress hormones.’
Importantly,  acquired traits other than those induced by trauma could also be  inherited through similar mechanisms, the researcher suspects. 
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