DiMarzio Karissa, Rojo-Wissar Darlynn M, Hernandez Valencia Evelyn, Ver Pault Mikayla, Denherder Shane, Lopez Adamari, Lerch Jena, Metrailer Georgette, Merrill Sarah, Highlander April, Parent Justin
Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
Sleep Adv. 2025 Jan 31;6(1):zpaf003. doi: 10.1093/sleepadvances/zpaf003. eCollection 2025.
We investigated how a dimension of early life adversity (ELA), capturing threat in the home, relates to later epigenetic age acceleration in adolescence through sleep (duration, efficiency, and timing) to empirically test theoretical models suggesting the importance of sleep as a key mechanism linking ELA with poor health outcomes and to expand the limited literature on sleep and epigenetic aging among youth.
We utilized data from 861 participants in the Future of Families and Child Wellbeing Study who participated in the actigraphy substudy at age 15. Sleep variables used were average total sleep time (TST), sleep efficiency (SE), and sleep onset timing. Home threat was determined at ages 3, 5, and 9 from parent reports on the Child Conflict Tactics Scale, and epigenetic aging was measured through DNA methylation analyses of saliva samples collected at age 15.
Higher levels of childhood home threat exposure were associated with less adolescent TST, lower SE, and later sleep onset timing. Adolescent SE and timing were associated with a faster pace of aging and epigenetic age acceleration. SE and timing mediated the link between childhood home threat exposure and adolescent epigenetic aging.
Epigenetic embedding of childhood threat exposure in the home may occur through adversity-related sleep disturbances in adolescence. Findings warrant greater attention to pediatric sleep health in theoretical models of biological embedding of adversity and point to sleep health improvement as a potential way to prevent adversity-related epigenetic age acceleration.
我们调查了早期生活逆境(ELA)的一个维度,即家庭中的威胁,如何通过睡眠(时长、效率和时间)与青少年后期的表观遗传年龄加速相关,以实证检验理论模型,这些模型表明睡眠作为将ELA与不良健康结果联系起来的关键机制的重要性,并扩展关于青少年睡眠与表观遗传衰老的有限文献。
我们利用了来自“家庭与儿童幸福未来研究”的861名参与者的数据,这些参与者在15岁时参加了活动记录仪子研究。使用的睡眠变量包括平均总睡眠时间(TST)、睡眠效率(SE)和入睡时间。家庭威胁在3岁、5岁和9岁时根据父母对《儿童冲突策略量表》的报告确定,表观遗传衰老通过对15岁时采集的唾液样本进行DNA甲基化分析来测量。
童年时期家庭威胁暴露水平较高与青少年TST减少、SE降低和入睡时间较晚有关。青少年的SE和入睡时间与更快的衰老速度和表观遗传年龄加速有关。SE和入睡时间介导了童年家庭威胁暴露与青少年表观遗传衰老之间的联系。
童年时期家庭威胁暴露的表观遗传嵌入可能通过青春期与逆境相关的睡眠障碍发生。研究结果值得在逆境的生物嵌入理论模型中更多地关注儿童睡眠健康,并指出改善睡眠健康是预防与逆境相关的表观遗传年龄加速的潜在途径。