The Daily Telegraph

Child abuse changes the DNA of victims, say scientists

- By Henry Bodkin

CHILDHOOD sexual abuse may leave “molecular scars” on a victim’s DNA that could one day be used as evidence in court, scientists have said.

A study found similar alteration­s in the activity of genes among men who had been abused in childhood.

Researcher­s at Harvard and the University of British Columbia (UBC) believe the discovery of the difference in a process called methylatio­n between those who had been abused and those who had not could pave the way for a genetic test to indicate whether abuse took place.

Methylatio­n acts as a “dimmer switch” on genes, affecting the extent a particular gene is activated or not, say researcher­s.

Published in the journal Translatio­nal Psychiatry, the study found a distinct methylatio­n difference between victims and non-victims in 12 regions of the men’s genomes.

In eight DNA regions, the genes of victims were dimmed by more than 10 per cent compared with non-victims, and in one region the difference was 29 per cent.

Michael Kobor, professor of medical genetics at UBC, said: “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.

“So it’s conceivabl­e that the correlatio­ns we found between methylatio­n and child abuse might provide a percentage probabilit­y that abuse had occurred.”

The research team identified a group of men who are part of a much larger, long-term health tracking study and asked them to donate their sperm.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom