The association of childhood maltreatment with lipid peroxidation and DNA damage in postpartum women

Erstveröffentlichung
2019-02-18
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Authors
Böck, Christina
Gumpp, Anja M.
König, Alexandra Maria
Radermacher, Peter
Karabatsiakis, Alexander
Faculties
Fakultät für Ingenieurwissenschaften, Informatik und PsychologieInstitutions
Institut für Psychologie und PädagogikUKU. Institut für Anästhesiologische Pathophysiologie und Verfahrensentwicklung
Published in
Frontiers in Psychiatry ; 10 (2019). - Art.-Nr. 23. - eISSN 1664-0640
Link to original publication
https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00023Peer review
ja
Document version
publishedVersion
Abstract
Childhood maltreatment (CM) is associated with an increased risk for the development of psychiatric and somatic disorders in later life. A potential link could be oxidative stress, which is defined as the imbalance between the amount of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the neutralizing capacity of anti-oxidative defense systems. However, the findings linking CM with oxidative stress have been inconsistent so far. In this study, we aimed to further explore this association by investigating biological markers of DNA and lipid damage due to oxidation in a comprehensive approach over two study cohorts of postpartum women (study cohort I and study cohort II). The severity of CM experiences (maltreatment load) was assessed in both studies using the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. In study cohort I (N = 30), we investigated whether CM was associated with higher levels of structural DNA damage in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) by two methods that are highly sensitive for detecting nuclear DNA strand breaks (comet assay and γH2AX staining). In study cohort II (N = 117), we then assessed in a larger cohort, that was specifically controlled for potential confounders for oxidative stress measurements, two established serum and plasma biomarkers of oxidative stress, one representing oxidative DNA and RNA damage (8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine and 8-hydroxyguanosine; 8-OH(d)G) and the other representing lipid peroxidation (8-isoprostane). In study cohort I, the analyses revealed no significant main effects of maltreatment load on cellular measures of nuclear DNA damage. The analyses of peripheral oxidative stress biomarkers in study cohort II revealed a significant main effect of maltreatment load on free 8-isoprostane plasma levels, but not on total 8-isprostane plasma levels and 8-OH(d)G serum levels. Taken together, by combining different methods and two study cohorts, we found no indications for higher oxidative DNA damages with higher maltreatment load in postpartum women. Further research is needed to investigate whether this increase in free 8-isoprostane is a marker for oxidative stress or whether it is instead functionally involved in ROS-related signaling pathways that potentially regulate inflammatory processes following a history of CM.
Funding information
Kindliche Stressresilienz und Entwicklung und biologische Korrelate von traumatischem Stress / BMBF [01KR1304A]
Is supplemented by
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00023/full#supplementary-materialSubject Headings
Kindesmisshandlung [GND]Posttraumatisches Stresssyndrom [GND]
DNS-Schädigung [GND]
Child abuse [MeSH]
Stress disorders, Post-traumatic [MeSH]
Oxidative stress [MeSH]
DNA damage [MeSH]
Lipid peroxidation [MeSH]
Comet assay [MeSH]
Keywords
childhood maltreatment; 8-isoprostane; 8-OH(d)G; γH2AXDewey Decimal Group
DDC 610 / Medicine & healthMetadata
Show full item recordCitation example
Böck, Christina et al. (2021): The association of childhood maltreatment with lipid peroxidation and DNA damage in postpartum women. Open Access Repositorium der Universität Ulm. http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-36418