4.6 Article

Epigenetic Modifications Associated with Maternal Anxiety during Pregnancy and Children's Behavioral Measures

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10092421

Keywords

DNA methylation; IGF2; H19; LINE1; maternal anxiety; interaction; mediation; sex-specific effects

Categories

Funding

  1. European Science Foundation [EuroSTRESS-PELS-99930AB6-0CAC-423B-9527-7487B33085F3]
  2. European Commission [279281]
  3. Erasmus+ travel grant

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Epigenetic changes related to altered behavior and neuropsychiatric disorders are associated with maternal anxiety during pregnancy. The study found a link between maternal anxiety and children's DNA methylation levels, with sex differences and timing effects being highly important. However, DNA methylation was not supported as the underlying mechanism for the impact of maternal anxiety during pregnancy on offspring's behavioral measures.
Epigenetic changes are associated with altered behavior and neuropsychiatric disorders and they modify the trajectory of aging. Maternal anxiety during pregnancy is a common environmental challenge for the fetus, causing changes in DNA methylation. Here, we determined the mediating role of DNA methylation and the moderating role of offspring sex on the association between maternal anxiety and children's behavioral measures. In 83 mother-child dyads, maternal anxiety was assessed in each trimester of pregnancy when the child was four years of age. Children's behavioral measures and children's buccal DNA methylation levels (NR3C1, IGF2/H19 ICR, and LINE1) were examined. Higher maternal anxiety during the third trimester was associated with more methylation levels of the NR3C1. Moderating effects of sex on the association between maternal anxiety and methylation were found for IGF2/H19 and LINE1 CpGs. Mediation analysis showed that methylation of NR3C1 could buffer the effects of maternal anxiety on children's behavioral measures, but this effect did not remain significant after controlling for covariates. In conclusion, our data support an association between maternal anxiety during pregnancy and DNA methylation. The results also underscore the importance of sex differences and timing effects. However, DNA methylation as underlying mechanism of the effect of maternal anxiety during pregnancy on offspring's behavioral measures was not supported.

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