2017
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-09235-9
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Exposure to Violence Accelerates Epigenetic Aging in Children

Abstract: Epigenetic processes, including DNA methylation, change reliably with age across the lifespan, such that DNA methylation can be used as an “epigenetic clock”. This epigenetic clock can be used to predict age and age acceleration, which occurs when methylation-based prediction of age exceeds chronological age and has been associated with increased mortality. In the current study we examined epigenetic age acceleration using saliva samples collected from children between ages 6–13 (N = 101). Children’s exposure … Show more

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Cited by 146 publications
(124 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…This likely reflects that these two variables were positively correlated in this sample ( r = 0.43) and highlights that there is a need to better understand the intersections of children's growth, health, and psychosocial experiences in diverse settings (McDade et al, ). In total, our results pertaining to family social stress align with some prior studies in the U.S. and Europe showing that childhood psychosocial stress and trauma were associated with greater EAA (Jovanovic et al, ; Wolf et al, ). Complementing some recent EAA work (Brody, Miller, et al, ; Brody, Yu, et al, ; Lawn et al, ) and previous epigenetics research using epigenome‐wide (Bush et al, ; Essex et al, ; McDade et al, ) and candidate‐gene approaches (Gouin et al, ; Turecki & Meaney, ), our findings indicate that parental conflict may be a component of stressful family environments that merits further study as a correlate of accelerated epigenetic aging in children.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…This likely reflects that these two variables were positively correlated in this sample ( r = 0.43) and highlights that there is a need to better understand the intersections of children's growth, health, and psychosocial experiences in diverse settings (McDade et al, ). In total, our results pertaining to family social stress align with some prior studies in the U.S. and Europe showing that childhood psychosocial stress and trauma were associated with greater EAA (Jovanovic et al, ; Wolf et al, ). Complementing some recent EAA work (Brody, Miller, et al, ; Brody, Yu, et al, ; Lawn et al, ) and previous epigenetics research using epigenome‐wide (Bush et al, ; Essex et al, ; McDade et al, ) and candidate‐gene approaches (Gouin et al, ; Turecki & Meaney, ), our findings indicate that parental conflict may be a component of stressful family environments that merits further study as a correlate of accelerated epigenetic aging in children.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…This likely reflects that these two variables were positively correlated in this sample (r = 0.43) and highlights that there is a need to better understand the intersections of children's growth, health, and psychosocial experiences in diverse settings (McDade et al, 2019). In total, our results pertaining to family social stress align with some prior studies in the U.S. and Europe showing that childhood psychosocial stress and trauma were associated with greater EAA (Jovanovic et al, 2017;Wolf et al, 2018).…”
Section: Family Environment and Children's Epigenetic Agingsupporting
confidence: 83%
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“…Future longitudinal studies that integrate neuroimaging markers with epigenome-based metrics (e.g., epigenetic aging measures from immune cells) can help advance our understanding of how life stressors build on each other to shape an individual’s immunological age and neural integrity over time. This approach would be well-suited for following at-risk children who are chronically exposed to violence 135 and assessing whether interventions (e.g., supportive family environments 136 ) reverse accelerated epigenetic aging and buffer against detrimental effects of life stressors.…”
Section: Epigenetic Effects Of Stress/trauma Response In the Brain Anmentioning
confidence: 99%