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Long-term Impact of Prenatal Famine on Differential DNA Methylation of Genes in the Serotonin Receptor Signalling Pathway in Adults

  • Xin Zeng
  • , Zhen Tan
  • , Weijing Wang
  • , Weilong Li
  • , Shuxia Li
  • , Dongfeng Zhang
  • , Qihua Tan*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • University of Helsinki
  • Qingdao University
  • The Second People’s Hospital of Lishui

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

The correlation of early life adversity with adulthood psychopathology has already been revealed by epidemiological studies. To find the biological mechanisms underlying the cross-talk between prenatal adversity and mental health, molecular genetic studies have been performed using animal models of prenatal undernutrition and stress, reporting altered expression of serotonin receptors which modulate the release of many neurotransmitters that regulate a broad range of physiological functions including psychopathology. Unfortunately, no such study has been possible on humans due to ethical reasons. Using the Chinese Famine of 1959-1961 as a natural experiment, we investigated DNA methylation patterns in genes of the serotonin receptor signaling pathway in the whole blood of adults born during the famine. A significant pattern of reduced DNA methylation was observed in sex combined samples (p value, 0.022). In a sex-stratified analysis, the pattern was only significant in females (p-value, 0.019) but not in males. We further tested the DNA methylation patterns specifically in HTR1A, HTR2A and the X-linked HTR2C and found reduced DNA methylation in females for HTR2A (p-value 0.033) and HTR2C (p-value 0.014) but not in males. Overall, this study reveals altered epigenetic regulation of the serotonin receptor signaling pathway in association with prenatal adversity in humans providing novel epigenetic evidence in support of neurodevelopmental origin of psychiatric disorders.
Original languageEnglish
JournalNeuroscience
Volume529
Pages (from-to)107-115
ISSN0306-4522
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2023

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