4.8 Article

Exposure to violence during childhood is associated with telomere erosion from 5 to 10 years of age: a longitudinal study

Journal

MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages 576-581

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/mp.2012.32

Keywords

childhood stress; cumulative violence exposure; erosion; longitudinal; telomere length

Funding

  1. NICHD Grant [HD061298]
  2. Jacobs Foundation
  3. NARSAD/Brain and Behaviour Research Foundation Young Investigator Award
  4. Medical Research Council (UKMRC) [G1002190, G9806489]
  5. NIA [AG032282]
  6. ESRC [RES-177-25-0013]
  7. NICHD [HD061298]
  8. British Academy
  9. Nuffield Foundation
  10. NIMH [MH077874]
  11. Economic and Social Research Council [ES/H034897/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  12. Medical Research Council [G9806489, G1002190] Funding Source: researchfish
  13. ESRC [ES/H034897/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  14. MRC [G9806489, G1002190] Funding Source: UKRI

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There is increasing interest in discovering mechanisms that mediate the effects of childhood stress on late-life disease morbidity and mortality. Previous studies have suggested one potential mechanism linking stress to cellular aging, disease and mortality in humans: telomere erosion. We examined telomere erosion in relation to children's exposure to violence, a salient early-life stressor, which has known long-term consequences for well-being and is a major public-health and social-welfare problem. In the first prospective-longitudinal study with repeated telomere measurements in children while they experienced stress, we tested the hypothesis that childhood violence exposure would accelerate telomere erosion from age 5 to age 10 years. Violence was assessed as exposure to maternal domestic violence, frequent bullying victimization and physical maltreatment by an adult. Participants were 236 children (49% females; 42% with one or more violence exposures) recruited from the Environmental-Risk Longitudinal Twin Study, a nationally representative 1994-1995 birth cohort. Each child's mean relative telomere length was measured simultaneously in baseline and follow-up DNA samples, using the quantitative PCR method for T/S ratio (the ratio of telomere repeat copy numbers to single-copy gene numbers). Compared with their counterparts, the children who experienced two or more kinds of violence exposure showed significantly more telomere erosion between age-5 baseline and age-10 follow-up measurements, even after adjusting for sex, socioeconomic status and body mass index (B- -0.052, s.e. -0.021, P=0.015). This finding provides support for a mechanism linking cumulative childhood stress to telomere maintenance, observed already at a young age, with potential impact for life-long health. Molecular Psychiatry (2013) 18, 576-81; doi:10.1038/mp.2012.32; published online 24 April 2012

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