AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the impact of maternal childhood trauma on the mental health of their offspring, highlighting that while many children show increased psychopathology, some exhibit resilience.
  • It explores the role of epigenetic aging—measured through DNA methylation—in moderating the effects of maternal childhood adversity, particularly focusing on self-reported experiences of trauma.
  • Results reveal that while maternal sexual abuse is linked to offspring symptoms, this relationship diminishes in children who display accelerated epigenetic aging, suggesting a mechanism for resilience against intergenerational trauma.

Article Abstract

Although offspring of women exposed to childhood trauma exhibit elevated rates of psychopathology, many children demonstrate resilience to these intergenerational impacts. Among the variety of factors that likely contribute to resilience, epigenetic processes have been suggested to play an important role. The current study used a prospective design to test the novel hypothesis that offspring epigenetic aging - a measure of methylation differences that are associated with infant health outcomes - moderates the relationship between maternal exposure to childhood adversity and offspring symptomatology. Maternal childhood adversity was self-reported during pregnancy via the ACEs survey and the CTQ, which assessed total childhood trauma as well as maltreatment subtypes (i.e., emotional, physical, and sexual abuse). Offspring blood samples were collected at or shortly after birth and assayed on a DNA methylation microarray, and offspring symptomatology was assessed with the CBCL/1.5-5 when offspring were 2-4 years old. Results indicated that maternal childhood trauma, particularly sexual abuse, was predictive of offspring symptoms (s = 0.003-0.03). However, the associations between maternal sexual abuse and offspring symptomatology were significantly attenuated in offspring with accelerated epigenetic aging. These findings further our understanding of how epigenetic processes may contribute to and attenuate the intergenerational link between stress and psychopathology.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954579423001232DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

childhood trauma
16
epigenetic aging
12
maternal childhood
12
offspring symptomatology
12
sexual abuse
12
offspring
10
offspring symptoms
8
epigenetic processes
8
childhood adversity
8
abuse offspring
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!