Exposure to childhood abuse is associated with human sperm DNA methylation.
Andrea L RobertsNicole GladishEvan GatevMeaghan J JonesYing ChenJulia L MacIsaacShelley S TworogerS Bryn AustinCigdem TanrikutJorge E ChavarroAndrea A BaccarelliMichael S KoborPublished in: Translational psychiatry (2018)
Offspring of persons exposed to childhood abuse are at higher risk of neurodevelopmental and physical health disparities across the life course. Animal experiments have indicated that paternal environmental stressors can affect sperm DNA methylation and gene expression in an offspring. Childhood abuse has been associated with epigenetic marks in human blood, saliva, and brain tissue, with statistically significant methylation differences ranging widely. However, no studies have examined the association of childhood abuse with DNA methylation in gametes. We examined the association of childhood abuse with DNA methylation in human sperm. Combined physical, emotional, and sexual abuse in childhood was characterized as none, medium, or high. DNA methylation was assayed in 46 sperm samples from 34 men in a longitudinal non-clinical cohort using HumanMethylation450 BeadChips. We performed principal component analysis and examined the correlation of principal components with abuse exposure. Childhood abuse was associated with a component that captured 6.2% of total variance in DNA methylation (p < 0.05). Next, we investigated the regions differentially methylated by abuse exposure. We identified 12 DNA regions differentially methylated by childhood abuse, containing 64 probes and including sites on genes associated with neuronal function (MAPT, CLU), fat cell regulation (PRDM16), and immune function (SDK1). We examined adulthood health behaviors, mental health, and trauma exposure as potential mediators of an association between abuse and DNAm, and found that mental health and trauma exposure partly mediated the association. Finally, we constructed a parsimonious epigenetic marker for childhood abuse using a machine learning approach, which identified three probes that predicted high vs. no childhood abuse in 71% of participants. Our results suggested that childhood abuse is associated with sperm DNA methylation, which may have implications for offspring development. Larger samples are needed to identify with greater confidence specific genomic regions differentially methylated by childhood abuse.
Keyphrases
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- mental health
- early life
- genome wide
- intimate partner violence
- childhood cancer
- machine learning
- healthcare
- endothelial cells
- stem cells
- public health
- copy number
- high fat diet
- bone marrow
- skeletal muscle
- metabolic syndrome
- wastewater treatment
- functional connectivity
- social media
- mass spectrometry
- artificial intelligence
- health information
- mental illness
- insulin resistance
- fluorescent probe
- high resolution