Journal article

Does maternal mental well-being in pregnancy impact the early human epigenome?

J Ryan, T Mansell, P Fransquet, R Saffery

Epigenomics | FUTURE MEDICINE LTD | Published : 2017

Abstract

There is considerable interest in the potential nongenetic transmission of a suite of mental health conditions across generations, with epigenetics emerging as a candidate mediator of such effects. This review summarizes findings from 22 studies measuring candidate gene DNA methylation and seven epigenome-wide association studies of offspring epigenetic profile in women with adverse mental wellbeing measures (stress, depression or anxiety) in pregnancy. Despite some compelling evidence to suggest an association, there is a lack of reproducible findings, potentially linked to a number of limitations to this research and the field more broadly. Large cohorts with well characterized exposures a..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers