Prenatal stress and gestational epigenetic age: No evidence of associations based on a large prospective multi-cohort study

Author:

Murgatroyd Chris1ORCID,Salontaji Kristina,Smajlagic Dinka,Page Christian,Sanders Faye,Jugessur Astanand,Lyle Robert2ORCID,Tsotsi Stella2,Haftorn Kristine2,Felix Janine3ORCID,Walton EstherORCID,Tiemeier Henning4ORCID,Cecil Charlotte5ORCID,Bekkhus Mona

Affiliation:

1. Manchester Met University

2. Norwegian Sequencing Centre

3. Erasmus MC

4. Harvard T. Chan School of Public Health

5. , Erasmus Medical Centre, University Medical Center Rotterdam

Abstract

Abstract

Psychological stress during pregnancy is known to have a range of long-lasting negative consequences on the development and health of offspring. Here, we tested whether a measure of prenatal early-life stress was associated with a biomarker of physiological development at birth, namely epigenetic gestational age, using foetal cord-blood DNA-methylation data. Longitudinal cohorts from the Netherlands (Generation R Study [Generation R], n = 1,396), the UK (British Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children [ALSPAC], n = 642), and Norway (Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study [MoBa], n1 = 1,212 and n2 = 678) provided data on prenatal maternal stress and genome-wide DNA methylation from cord blood and were meta-analysed (pooled n = 3,928). Measures of epigenetic age acceleration were calculated using three different gestational epigenetic clocks: “Bohlin”, “EPIC overlap” and “Knight”. Prenatal stress exposure, examined as an overall cumulative score, was not significantly associated with epigenetically-estimated gestational age acceleration or deceleration in any of the clocks, based on the results of the pooled meta-analysis or those of the individual cohorts. No significant associations were identified with specific domains of prenatal stress exposure, including negative life events, contextual (socio-economic) stressors, parental risks (e.g., maternal psychopathology) and interpersonal risks (e.g., family conflict). Further, no significant associations were identified when analyses were stratified by sex. Overall, we find little support that prenatal psychosocial stress is associated with variation in epigenetic age at birth within the general paediatric population.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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