Deakin University
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fransquet-intergenerationaleffects-2021.pdf (5.1 MB)

Intergenerational effects of maternal post-traumatic stress disorder on offspring epigenetic patterns and cortisol levels

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-06-01, 00:00 authored by L Hjort, F Rushiti, S J Wang, Peter FransquetPeter Fransquet, S P Krasniqi, S I Çarkaxhiu, D Arifaj, V D Xhemaili, M Salihu, N A Leku, J Ryan
Aim: To investigate the association between maternal post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) during pregnancy and offspring DNA methylation and cortisol levels. Materials & methods: Blood genome-wide DNA methylation and cortisol was measured in the youngest child of 117 women who experienced sexual violence/torture during the Kosovo war. Results: Seventy-two percent of women had PTSD symptoms during pregnancy. Their children had higher cortisol levels and differential methylation at candidate genes ( NR3C1, HTR3A and BNDF) . No methylation differences reached epigenome-wide corrected significance levels. Conclusion: Identifying the biological processes whereby the negative effects of trauma are passed across generations and defining groups at high risk is a key step to breaking the intergenerational transmission of the effects of mental disorders.

History

Journal

Epigenomics

Volume

13

Issue

12

Pagination

967 - 980

Publisher

Future Medicine

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1750-1911

eISSN

1750-192X

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal