Biblioteca Humberto Rosselli Quijano
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Autor Pamela Scorza |
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Stage 2 registered report: epigenetic intergenerational transmission: mothers’ adverse childhood experiences and dna methylation / Pamela Scorza en Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Año 2023 - Vol. 62 - No. 10 (Octubre)
[artículo]
Título : Stage 2 registered report: epigenetic intergenerational transmission: mothers’ adverse childhood experiences and dna methylation Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Pamela Scorza, Autor ; Cristiane S. Duarte, Autor ; Seonjoo Lee, Autor Fecha de publicación: 2023 Artículo en la página: pp. 1110-1122 Idioma : Inglés (eng) Idioma original : Inglés (eng) Palabras clave: Metilación del ADN, Experiencias adversas de la infancia, Transmisión intergeneracional, Cohorte longitudinal, ALSPAC Resumen: Individual differences in risk for mental disorders over the lifespan are shaped by forces acting before the individual is born—in utero, but likely even earlier, during the mother’s own childhood. The environmental epigenetics hypothesis proposes that sustained effects of environmental conditions on gene expression are mediated by epigenetic mechanisms. Link: ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=30312
in Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry > Año 2023 - Vol. 62 - No. 10 (Octubre) . - pp. 1110-1122[artículo] Stage 2 registered report: epigenetic intergenerational transmission: mothers’ adverse childhood experiences and dna methylation [texto impreso] / Pamela Scorza, Autor ; Cristiane S. Duarte, Autor ; Seonjoo Lee, Autor . - 2023 . - pp. 1110-1122.
Idioma : Inglés (eng) Idioma original : Inglés (eng)
in Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry > Año 2023 - Vol. 62 - No. 10 (Octubre) . - pp. 1110-1122
Palabras clave: Metilación del ADN, Experiencias adversas de la infancia, Transmisión intergeneracional, Cohorte longitudinal, ALSPAC Resumen: Individual differences in risk for mental disorders over the lifespan are shaped by forces acting before the individual is born—in utero, but likely even earlier, during the mother’s own childhood. The environmental epigenetics hypothesis proposes that sustained effects of environmental conditions on gene expression are mediated by epigenetic mechanisms. Link: ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=30312