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Lookup NU author(s): Professor Caroline Relton
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We posit that maternal prenatal nutrition can influence offspring schizophrenia risk via epigenetic effects. In this article, we consider evidence that prenatal nutrition is linked to epigenetic outcomes in offspring and schizophrenia in offspring, and that schizophrenia is associated with epigenetic changes. We focus upon one-carbon metabolism as a mediator of the pathway between perturbed prenatal nutrition and the subsequent risk of schizophrenia. Although post-mortem human studies demonstrate DNA methylation changes in brains of people with schizophrenia, such studies cannot establish causality. We suggest a testable hypothesis that utilizes a novel two-step Mendelian randomization approach, to test the component parts of the proposed causal pathway leading from prenatal nutritional exposure to schizophrenia. Applied here to a specific example, such an approach is applicable for wider use to strengthen causal inference of the mediating role of epigenetic factors linking exposures to health outcomes in population-based studies.
Author(s): Kirkbride JB, Susser E, Kundakovic M, Kresovich JK, Smith GD, Relton CL
Publication type: Article
Publication status: Published
Journal: Epigenomics
Year: 2012
Volume: 4
Issue: 3
Pages: 303-315
Print publication date: 01/06/2012
ISSN (print): 1750-1911
ISSN (electronic): 1750-192X
Publisher: Future Medicine Ltd.
URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.2217/EPI.12.20
DOI: 10.2217/EPI.12.20
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