暴力体験が遺伝子に及ぼす影響が世代を超えて持続することを発見 (Violent Experiences Alter the Genome in Ways That Persist for Generations)

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2025-03-06 イェール大学

エール大学の人類学者キャサリン・パンター=ブリック教授らの国際研究チームは、戦争関連の暴力とトラウマが人間のゲノムに遺伝性の痕跡を残し、それが複数世代にわたって持続することを明らかにしました。 この研究は、シリア難民の3世代を対象に、DNAの化学的修飾であるエピジェネティックな変化を調査した初めてのものです。戦争による暴力を直接経験した女性だけでなく、戦争に直接触れていない孫世代にもエピジェネティックな変化が見られました。これらの発見は、進化の理解やトラウマ体験がどのようにゲノムに組み込まれ、世代を超えて持続するかについて重要な示唆を与えます。さらに、この結果は、戦争だけでなく、性的暴力、家庭内暴力、銃による暴力などの世代間影響を理解し、暴力防止の重要性を強調するものです。

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シリア難民の3世代における世代間暴力への曝露のエピジェネティックな特徴 Epigenetic signatures of intergenerational exposure to violence in three generations of Syrian refugees

Connie J. Mulligan,Edward B. Quinn,Dima Hamadmad,Christopher L. Dutton,Lisa Nevell,Alexandra M. Binder,Catherine Panter-Brick & Rana Dajani
Scientific Reports  Published:27 February 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-89818-z

暴力体験が遺伝子に及ぼす影響が世代を超えて持続することを発見 (Violent Experiences Alter the Genome in Ways That Persist for Generations)

Abstract

Maternal trauma influences infant and adult health outcomes and may impact future generations through epigenetic modifications such as DNA methylation (DNAm). Research in humans on the intergenerational epigenetic transmission of trauma effects is limited. In this study, we assessed DNAm signatures of war-related violence by comparing germline, prenatal, and direct exposures to violence across three generations of Syrian refugees. We compared families in which a pregnant grandmother versus a pregnant mother was exposed to violence and included a control group with no exposure to war. We collected buccal swab samples and survey data from mothers and 1–2 children in each of 48 families (n = 131 participants). Based on an epigenome-wide association study (EWAS), we identified differentially methylated regions (DMPs): 14 were associated with germline and 21 with direct exposure to violence. Most DMPs showed the same directionality in DNAm change across germline, prenatal, and direct exposures, suggesting a common epigenetic response to violence. Additionally, we identified epigenetic age acceleration in association with prenatal exposure to violence in children, highlighting the critical period of in utero development. This is the first report of an intergenerational epigenetic signature of violence, which has important implications for understanding the inheritance of trauma.

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