Child abuse could leave ‘molecular scars’ on its victims

News

Posted on

Children who are abused might carry the imprint of that trauma in their cells – a biochemical marking that is detectable years later, according to new research from BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute, University of British Columbia and Harvard University.

The findings, based on a comparison of chemical tags on the DNA of 34 adult men, still need confirmation from larger studies, and researchers don’t know if this tagging — known as methylation — affects the victims’ health.

But the difference in methylation between those who had been abused and those who had not – if it is replicated in larger studies and can be described in greater detail — might one day be useful as a biomarker for investigators or courts in weighing allegations of child abuse.

“Methylation is starting to be viewed as a potentially useful tool in criminal investigations — for example, by providing investigators with an approximate age of a person who left behind a sample of their DNA,” said senior author Dr. Michael Kobor, a BC Children’s Hospital investigator and medical genetics professor at UBC. “So it’s conceivable that the correlations we found between methylation and child abuse might provide a percentage probability that abuse had occurred.”

Credit: UBC Faculty of Medicine.

BCCHR Communications
More by this Author

Research News

Every day, BCCHR researchers work towards breakthroughs to transform the lives of kids in BC and around the world. Learn about our latest innovations and advancements in child health.

  • Young child holding their head
    News

    Emerging treatment options offer hope to children affected by migraine

    Headache disorders, such as migraine, can drastically disrupt daily life. Still, they are underestimated, underrecognized, and undertreated. Migraine is among the top three causes of disability in individuals aged 10 to 24, with 10 per cent of children experiencing it before reaching puberty. Migraine is associated with school absenteeism, disengagement from extracurricular activities, and decreased…

    Read more
  • News

    Gut fungi may hold the key to treating asthma, allergies worldwide

    Two new studies jointly published in Nature: The Clinical Microbiome reveal that certain species of fungi in the gut play a key role in the development of immune dysregulation and some pediatric allergic diseases — and may be promising targets for new therapies.

    Read more
  • Events

    Science Explorers

    Calling all elementary school teachers in Campbell River and surrounding communities! Experience the excitement of health science—right in your elementary school classroom!

    Read more

Donate to Research

With your support, we believe there’s nothing we can’t do. Funding helps bring hope out of the laboratory and into the clinic — to save and improve children’s lives.

donate now