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Leukocyte telomere length reflects prenatal stress exposure, but does not predict atopic dermatitis development at 1 year

Cited 8 time in Web of Science Cited 7 time in Scopus
Authors

Suh, Dong In; Kang, Mi-Jin; Park, Yoon Mee; Lee, Jun-Kyu; Lee, So-Yeon; Sheen, Youn Ho; Kim, Kyung Won; Ahn, Kangmo; Won, Hye-Sung; Lee, Mi-Young; Choi, Suk-Joo; Kwon, Ja-Young; Park, Hee Jin; Jun, Jong Kwan; Hong, Soo-Jong; Koh, Young Yull

Issue Date
2019-05
Publisher
대한천식알레르기학회
Citation
Allergy, Asthma & Immunology Research, Vol.11 No.3, pp.357-366
Abstract
Purpose: Prenatal maternal stress affects offspring's atopic dermatitis (AD) development, which is thought to be mediated by the oxidative stress. We aimed to evaluate the difference in leukocyte telomere length (LTL), a marker for exposure to oxidative stress, according to the prenatal stress exposure and the later AD development. Methods: From a birth cohort (the COhort for Childhood Origin of Asthma and allergic diseases) that had displayed a good epidemiologic association between the exposure to prenatal stress and AD development in the offspring, we selected 68 pairs of samples from 4 subject groups based on the level of prenatal maternal stress and later AD development. The LTL was measured from both cord blood and 1-year peripheral blood, and their LTLs were compared between subject groups. Finally, the proportion of AD development was examined in the subject groups that are reclassified based on subjects' exposure to prenatal stress and there LTL. Results: Cord-blood LTL was shorter in prenatally stressed infants than in unstressed ones (P = 0.026), which difference was still significant when subjects became 1 year old (P = 0.008). LTL of cord blood, as well as one of the 1-year peripheral blood, was not different according to later AD development at 1 year (P = 0.915 and 0.174, respectively). Shorter LTL made no increase in the proportion of later AD development in either prenatally high-stressed or low-stressed groups (P = 1.000 and 0.473, respectively). Conclusions: Cord-blood LTL may reflect subjects' exposure to maternal prenatal stress. However, the LTL shortening is not a risk factor of increasing AD development until the age of 1, and a longer investigation may be necessary for validation. Currently, the results doubt the role of LTL shortening as a marker for risk assessment tool for the prenatal stress associated with AD development in the offspring.
ISSN
2092-7355
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/191282
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4168/aair.2019.11.3.357
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