4.6 Article

Childhood adverse events and BDNF promoter methylation in later-life

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FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
卷 14, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1108485

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BDNF; early-life adversities; stress; blood; DNA methylation; epigenetics; older adults

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Studies have investigated the potential role of DNA methylation in the enduring effects of early-life stress and trauma on health. This study aimed to explore the association between childhood adversity and BDNF promoter methylation in older adults. Results showed no strong evidence of a long-term association between childhood abuse/maltreatment or financial difficulties/poverty and BDNF methylation in older individuals. Differential methylation at some CpG sites was observed for war/natural disaster, but these findings were not significant after correction for multiple testing. Further large prospective studies are needed to examine DNA methylation across the genome.
Studies have shown that the effects of early-life stress and trauma can be enduring, with long-term negative effects on health. Epigenetics, including DNA methylation, have been implicated as a potential mechanism for these effects. Brain-derived neurotropic factor (BDNF) is a neurotransmitter involved in learning and memory, and altered BDNF promoter methylation measured in peripheral tissue has been found with early-life stress. However, whether such methylation differences remain stable into later life, is unknown. This study aimed to investigate the association between childhood adversity and BDNF promoter methylation in adults aged 65 years and over. Data came from a large study of older community-dwelling individuals in France (ESPRIT). Information on three major childhood adverse events, namely abuse/maltreatment, war/natural disaster, and financial difficulties/poverty, was obtained by retrospective reporting from participants of ESPRIT study. BDNF promoter I and IV methylation was assessed in blood and buccal tissue. Linear regression analysis was performed, adjusting for age, sex, education, depression, and morbidity. Among 927 participants, there was no strong evidence that childhood abuse/maltreatment or financial difficulties/poverty were associated with BDNF methylation in older individuals. For war/natural disaster, differential methylation at four of twenty-nine CpG sites was observed, however, these would not have remained significant after correction for multiple testing. Together, these findings do not support a long-term association between adverse childhood events and BDNF methylation in older age, but further large prospective studies are needed, which do not target specific genes, but consider DNA methylation across the genome.

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