Cultural mismatch and accelerated epigenetic age during the transition to college

Previous literature has highlighted home-school cultural value mismatch – a cultural mismatch between interdependent family obligations and independent academic obligations, as a psychosocial stressor among first-generation college students from historically marginalized backgrounds. However, no stu...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yolanda Vasquez-Salgado, Gabrielle Halim, Angel E. Morales, Katelan Galvan, Teresa Seeman, Steve Cole
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-07-01
Series:Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266635462500047X
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849336084519976960
author Yolanda Vasquez-Salgado
Gabrielle Halim
Angel E. Morales
Katelan Galvan
Teresa Seeman
Steve Cole
author_facet Yolanda Vasquez-Salgado
Gabrielle Halim
Angel E. Morales
Katelan Galvan
Teresa Seeman
Steve Cole
author_sort Yolanda Vasquez-Salgado
collection DOAJ
description Previous literature has highlighted home-school cultural value mismatch – a cultural mismatch between interdependent family obligations and independent academic obligations, as a psychosocial stressor among first-generation college students from historically marginalized backgrounds. However, no studies to date have examined its association with an objective biomarker of health. Given accumulating evidence linking higher psychosocial stress to accelerated epigenetic age – a measure of one's biological age based on DNA methylation levels, we hypothesized that higher levels of cultural mismatch would be associated with accelerated epigenetic age. In this Transition to College Study, historically marginalized students (N = 64; Mage = 18.0; SD = 0.4; 82.8 % Latinx; 87.5 % first-generation college) completed an online survey and provided a salivary sample during their first semester at a public four-year university. GrimAge, FitAge and DunedinPACE, second and third-generation epigenetic aging measures, were used for analysis. Hierarchical linear regressions, controlling for chronological age, ethnicity, biological sex, body-mass-index, smoking and alcohol use, and parental socioeconomic status, were used to test our hypothesis. Results indicated that higher levels of mismatch between family and academic obligations were associated with accelerated epigenetic age as measured by GrimAge and FitAge, but not DunedinPACE. Our findings highlight a novel association between this mismatch and biomarkers known to predict mortality and future disease risk. Implications for research and interventions in higher education are discussed.
format Article
id doaj-art-e820e4b92be045bdb59fc85185a52d52
institution Kabale University
issn 2666-3546
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health
spelling doaj-art-e820e4b92be045bdb59fc85185a52d522025-08-20T03:45:04ZengElsevierBrain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health2666-35462025-07-014610098910.1016/j.bbih.2025.100989Cultural mismatch and accelerated epigenetic age during the transition to collegeYolanda Vasquez-Salgado0Gabrielle Halim1Angel E. Morales2Katelan Galvan3Teresa Seeman4Steve Cole5California State University, Northridge, United States; Corresponding author.California State University, Northridge, United StatesCalifornia State University, Northridge, United StatesCalifornia State University, Northridge, United StatesUniversity of California, Los Angeles, United StatesUniversity of California, Los Angeles, United StatesPrevious literature has highlighted home-school cultural value mismatch – a cultural mismatch between interdependent family obligations and independent academic obligations, as a psychosocial stressor among first-generation college students from historically marginalized backgrounds. However, no studies to date have examined its association with an objective biomarker of health. Given accumulating evidence linking higher psychosocial stress to accelerated epigenetic age – a measure of one's biological age based on DNA methylation levels, we hypothesized that higher levels of cultural mismatch would be associated with accelerated epigenetic age. In this Transition to College Study, historically marginalized students (N = 64; Mage = 18.0; SD = 0.4; 82.8 % Latinx; 87.5 % first-generation college) completed an online survey and provided a salivary sample during their first semester at a public four-year university. GrimAge, FitAge and DunedinPACE, second and third-generation epigenetic aging measures, were used for analysis. Hierarchical linear regressions, controlling for chronological age, ethnicity, biological sex, body-mass-index, smoking and alcohol use, and parental socioeconomic status, were used to test our hypothesis. Results indicated that higher levels of mismatch between family and academic obligations were associated with accelerated epigenetic age as measured by GrimAge and FitAge, but not DunedinPACE. Our findings highlight a novel association between this mismatch and biomarkers known to predict mortality and future disease risk. Implications for research and interventions in higher education are discussed.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266635462500047XHome-school cultural value mismatchCultural mismatchFamily obligationEpigenetic ageEpigenetic age accelerationBiological aging
spellingShingle Yolanda Vasquez-Salgado
Gabrielle Halim
Angel E. Morales
Katelan Galvan
Teresa Seeman
Steve Cole
Cultural mismatch and accelerated epigenetic age during the transition to college
Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health
Home-school cultural value mismatch
Cultural mismatch
Family obligation
Epigenetic age
Epigenetic age acceleration
Biological aging
title Cultural mismatch and accelerated epigenetic age during the transition to college
title_full Cultural mismatch and accelerated epigenetic age during the transition to college
title_fullStr Cultural mismatch and accelerated epigenetic age during the transition to college
title_full_unstemmed Cultural mismatch and accelerated epigenetic age during the transition to college
title_short Cultural mismatch and accelerated epigenetic age during the transition to college
title_sort cultural mismatch and accelerated epigenetic age during the transition to college
topic Home-school cultural value mismatch
Cultural mismatch
Family obligation
Epigenetic age
Epigenetic age acceleration
Biological aging
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266635462500047X
work_keys_str_mv AT yolandavasquezsalgado culturalmismatchandacceleratedepigeneticageduringthetransitiontocollege
AT gabriellehalim culturalmismatchandacceleratedepigeneticageduringthetransitiontocollege
AT angelemorales culturalmismatchandacceleratedepigeneticageduringthetransitiontocollege
AT katelangalvan culturalmismatchandacceleratedepigeneticageduringthetransitiontocollege
AT teresaseeman culturalmismatchandacceleratedepigeneticageduringthetransitiontocollege
AT stevecole culturalmismatchandacceleratedepigeneticageduringthetransitiontocollege