AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how typical variations in maternal sensitivity affect the DNA methylation (DNAm) of their children, linking caregiving practices to gene expression.
  • Researchers observed maternal sensitivity in children at ages 3 and 4, and assessed their DNAm at age 6, providing a more comprehensive view than previous studies focused solely on extreme caregiving contexts.
  • Significant associations were found in 13 genomic regions related to maternal sensitivity, revealing potential connections to psychological issues, immune function, and stress responses, while also considering genetic factors and socio-environmental influences.

Article Abstract

Background: Experimental work in animals has shown that DNA methylation (DNAm), an epigenetic mechanism regulating gene expression, is influenced by typical variation in maternal care. While emerging research in humans supports a similar association, studies to date have been limited to candidate gene and cross-sectional approaches, with a focus on extreme deviations in the caregiving environment.

Methods: Here, we explored the prospective association between typical variation in maternal sensitivity and offspring epigenome-wide DNAm, in a population-based cohort of children ( = 235). Maternal sensitivity was observed when children were 3- and 4-years-old. DNAm, quantified with the Infinium 450 K array, was extracted at age 6 (whole blood). The influence of methylation quantitative trait loci (mQTLs), DNAm at birth (cord blood), and confounders (socioeconomic status, maternal psychopathology) was considered in follow-up analyses.

Results: Genome-wide significant associations between maternal sensitivity and offspring DNAm were observed at 13 regions ( < 1.06 × 10), but not at single sites. Follow-up analyses indicated that associations at these regions were in part related to genetic factors, confounders, and baseline DNAm levels at birth, as evidenced by the presence of mQTLs at five regions and estimate attenuations. Robust associations with maternal sensitivity were found at four regions, annotated to , , , and .

Conclusions: These findings provide novel leads into the relationship between typical variation in maternal caregiving and offspring DNAm in humans, highlighting robust regions of associations, previously implicated in psychological and developmental problems, immune functioning, and stress responses.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0033291720004353DOI Listing

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