Association between maternal depression symptoms and child telomere length

The biological mechanisms that explain how adverse early life events influence adult disease risk are poorly understood. One proposed mechanism is via the induction of accelerated biological aging, for which telomere length is considered a biomarker. We aimed to determine if maternal depression pre-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of psychiatric research 2024-06, Vol.174, p.319-325
Hauptverfasser: Walker, Caroline G., Thayer, Zaneta M., Marks, Emma J., Ly, Kien N., Pillai, Avinesh, Waldie, Karen, Underwood, Lisa, Snell, Russell G., Knowles, Sarah D., Cha, Jane E., Morton, Susan M.B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The biological mechanisms that explain how adverse early life events influence adult disease risk are poorly understood. One proposed mechanism is via the induction of accelerated biological aging, for which telomere length is considered a biomarker. We aimed to determine if maternal depression pre- and post-partum was associated with telomere length in children at 4 years of age (n = 4299). Mothers completed structured questionnaires assessing depression during pregnancy (Edinburgh Depression Scale), at 9 months (Edinburgh Depression Scale), and at 54 months postpartum (Patient Health Questionnaire 9). Regression methods were used to investigate the relationship between telomere length (DNA from saliva) and maternal depression score recorded at each stage. Significant covariates included in the final model were: maternal age at pregnancy; child sex; child ethnicity; gestational age group, and rurality group. Child telomere length was found to be longer if their mother had a higher depression score at both postpartum time points tested (9 months of age; coefficient 0.003, SE = 0.001, P = 0.01, 54 months of age; coefficient 0.003, SE = 0.002, P = 0.02). Although these findings seem paradoxical, increased telomere length may be an adaptive response to early life stressors. We propose several testable hypotheses for these results and to determine if the positive association between depression and telomere length is a developmental adaptation or an indirect consequence of environmental factors. [Display omitted] •Postnatal but not antenatal maternal depression is associated with child telomere length.•Pre and postnatal maternal anxiety was not associated with child telomere length.•Postnatal maternal depression was associated with longer telomeres in children at 4 years of age.•Longer telomeres could reflect developmental tradeoffs in anticipation of future high stress environments.
ISSN:0022-3956
1879-1379
DOI:10.1016/j.jpsychires.2024.04.037