Literature DB >> 31156717

The paradox of care in behavioral epigenetics: Constructing early-life adversity in the lab.

Martine Lappé1.   

Abstract

Many epigenetic studies focus on how stress, trauma, and care become molecularly embodied, affect gene expression without changing DNA sequence, and produce changes that influence the health and behavior of individuals, their offspring, and future generations. This article describes how care has become central in research on the epigenetic effects of early-life adversity. My analysis draws on two years of ethnographic research in a behavioral epigenetics laboratory in the United States. Building on traditions in feminist theory and the sociology of science, I document how care is enacted with research samples, experimental protocols, and behavioral endpoints in experiments with model organisms. My findings point to tensions between researchers' care for the data and their measurement of adversity as a discrete variable in the form of maternal interaction, neglect, and abuse. I argue that these tensions suggest a "paradox of care" that is actively shaping how epigenetic knowledge is produced and its impacts in society. My analysis shows how decisions in the lab are shaping new understandings of how early-life experiences influence health, with significant impacts on our expectations of mothers and pregnant women. This study suggests that the more complex explanations of health and development promised by epigenetics are simultaneously constructed and constrained by caring practices in the laboratory.

Entities:  

Keywords:  behavioral epigenetics; care; early-life adversity; feminist science studies; knowledge production; laboratory ethnography

Year:  2018        PMID: 31156717      PMCID: PMC6540972          DOI: 10.1057/s41292-017-0090-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosocieties        ISSN: 1745-8552


  27 in total

Review 1.  The neurodevelopmental origins of suicidal behavior.

Authors:  Gustavo Turecki; Carl Ernst; Fabrice Jollant; Benoit Labonté; Naguib Mechawar
Journal:  Trends Neurosci       Date:  2011-12-15       Impact factor: 13.837

2.  The lure of the epigenome.

Authors:  Margaret Lock
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2013-06-01       Impact factor: 79.321

Review 3.  Epigenetic mechanisms and the transgenerational effects of maternal care.

Authors:  Frances A Champagne
Journal:  Front Neuroendocrinol       Date:  2008-03-28       Impact factor: 8.606

4.  Matters of care in technoscience: assembling neglected things. .

Authors:  Maria Puig de la Bellacasa
Journal:  Soc Stud Sci       Date:  2011-02       Impact factor: 3.885

Review 5.  Maternal imprints and the origins of variation.

Authors:  Frances A Champagne
Journal:  Horm Behav       Date:  2011-03-03       Impact factor: 3.587

Review 6.  Effects of repeated maternal separation on anxiety- and depression-related phenotypes in different mouse strains.

Authors:  Rachel A Millstein; Andrew Holmes
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2006-09-06       Impact factor: 8.989

Review 7.  Early experience and the development of stress reactivity and regulation in children.

Authors:  Michelle M Loman; Megan R Gunnar
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2009-05-27       Impact factor: 8.989

8.  Motherhood preconceived: the emergence of the Preconception Health and Health Care Initiative.

Authors:  Miranda R Waggoner
Journal:  J Health Polit Policy Law       Date:  2012-12-21       Impact factor: 2.265

9.  The incidence and course of depression in bereaved youth 21 months after the loss of a parent to suicide, accident, or sudden natural death.

Authors:  David Brent; Nadine Melhem; M Bertille Donohoe; Monica Walker
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  2009-05-01       Impact factor: 18.112

10.  Food as exposure: Nutritional epigenetics and the new metabolism.

Authors:  Hannah Landecker
Journal:  Biosocieties       Date:  2011-03-07
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  3 in total

1.  You Are What Your Mother Endured: Intergenerational Epigenetics, Early Caregiving, and the Temporal Embedding of Adversity.

Authors:  Martine Lappé; Robbin Jeffries Hein
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2021-12

2.  Caring for data: Value creation in a data-intensive research laboratory.

Authors:  Clémence Pinel; Barbara Prainsack; Christopher McKevitt
Journal:  Soc Stud Sci       Date:  2020-02-13       Impact factor: 3.885

3.  Troubling Neurobiological Vulnerability: Psychiatric Risk and the Adverse Milieu in Environmental Epigenetics Research.

Authors:  Angela Marques Filipe; Stephanie Lloyd; Alexandre Larivée
Journal:  Front Sociol       Date:  2021-04-12
  3 in total

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