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Ingrid Sadler-Riggleman

Researcher at Washington State University

Publications -  41
Citations -  1981

Ingrid Sadler-Riggleman is an academic researcher from Washington State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epigenetics & DNA methylation. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 41 publications receiving 1422 citations.

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Environmentally induced epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease.

TL;DR: Observations suggest environmentally induced epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease is a critical aspect of disease etiology, toxicology and evolution that needs to be considered.
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Alterations in sperm DNA methylation, non-coding RNA and histone retention associate with DDT-induced epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease.

TL;DR: All three different epigenetic processes were concurrently altered as DDT induced the epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of sperm epimutations, demonstrating all three epigenetic Processes are involved in transGenerational inheritance.
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Assessment of Glyphosate Induced Epigenetic Transgenerational Inheritance of Pathologies and Sperm Epimutations: Generational Toxicology.

TL;DR: It is proposed glyphosate can induce the transgenerational inheritance of disease and germline (e.g. sperm) epimutations through differential DNA methylation regions (DMRs).
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Alterations in sperm DNA methylation, non-coding RNA expression, and histone retention mediate vinclozolin-induced epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease.

TL;DR: Investigation of the vinclozolin-induced concurrent alterations of a number of different epigenetic factors, including DNA methylation, ncRNA, and histone retention in rat sperm shows that the three different types of epimutations are involved and integrated in the mediation of the epigenetic transgenerational inheritance phenomenon.
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Atrazine induced epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease, lean phenotype and sperm epimutation pathology biomarkers.

TL;DR: Observations indicate that although atrazine does not promote disease in the directly exposed F1 generation, it does have the capacity to promote the epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease.