Interaction between prenatal stress and dopamine D4 receptor genotype in predicting aggression and cortisol levels in young adults
详细信息    查看全文
  • 作者:Arlette F. Buchmann (1)
    Katrin Zohsel (1)
    Dorothea Blomeyer (1)
    Erika Hohm (1)
    Sarah Hohmann (1)
    Christine Jennen-Steinmetz (2)
    Jens Treutlein (3)
    Katja Becker (4)
    Tobias Banaschewski (1)
    Martin H. Schmidt (1)
    Günter Esser (5)
    Daniel Brandeis (1) (7) (8)
    Luise Poustka (1)
    Ulrich S. Zimmermann (6)
    Manfred Laucht (1) (5)
  • 关键词:Prenatal stress ; Aggression ; Cortisol ; DRD4 ; Gene ; environment interaction
  • 刊名:Psychopharmacology
  • 出版年:2014
  • 出版时间:August 2014
  • 年:2014
  • 卷:231
  • 期:16
  • 页码:3089-3097
  • 全文大小:278 KB
  • 参考文献:1. Achenbach T (1991) Young Adult Self Report. Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT
    2. Agrez U, Winkler Metzke C, Steinhausen H-C (2011) Psychometric characteristics of the German version of the Young Adult Self-Report (YASR). Z Klin Psychol Psychother 40:75-4 CrossRef
    3. Alink LR, van Ijzendoorn MH, Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, Mesman J, Juffer F, Koot HM (2008) Cortisol and externalizing behavior in children and adolescents: mixed meta-analytic evidence for the inverse relation of basal cortisol and cortisol reactivity with externalizing behavior. Dev Psychobiol 50:427-50 CrossRef
    4. Asghari V, Schoots O, van Kats S, Ohara K, Jovanovic V, Guan HC, Bunzow JR, Petronis A, Van Tol HH (1994) Dopamine D4 receptor repeat: analysis of different native and mutant forms of the human and rat genes. Mol Pharmacol 46:364-73
    5. Asghari V, Sanyal S, Buchwaldt S, Paterson A, Jovanovic V, Van Tol HH (1995) Modulation of intracellular cyclic AMP levels by different human dopamine D4 receptor variants. J Neurochem 65:1157-165 CrossRef
    6. Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, van Ijzendoorn MH (2006) Gene-environment interaction of the dopamine D4 receptor (DRD4) and observed maternal insensitivity predicting externalizing behavior in preschoolers. Dev Psychobiol 48:406-09 CrossRef
    7. Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, van Ijzendoorn MH (2011) Differential susceptibility to rearing environment depending on dopamine-related genes: new evidence and a meta-analysis. Dev Psychopathol 23:39-2 CrossRef
    8. Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, van Ijzendoorn MH, Pijlman FT, Mesman J, Juffer F (2008) Experimental evidence for differential susceptibility: dopamine D4 receptor polymorphism (DRD4 VNTR) moderates intervention effects on toddlers-externalizing behavior in a randomized controlled trial. Dev Psychol 44:293-00 CrossRef
    9. Barker ED, Maughan B (2009) Differentiating early-onset persistent versus childhood-limited conduct problem youth. Am J Psychiatry 166:900-08 CrossRef
    10. Beach SR, Lei MK, Brody GH, Simons RL, Cutrona C, Philibert RA (2012) Genetic moderation of contextual effects on negative arousal and parenting in African-American parents. J Fam Psychol 26:46-5 CrossRef
    11. Berry D, Deater-Deckard K, McCartney K, Wang Z, Petrill SA (2013) Gene-environment interaction between dopamine receptor D4 7-repeat polymorphism and early maternal sensitivity predicts inattention trajectories across middle childhood. Dev Psychopathol 25:291-06 CrossRef
    12. Brennan PA, Pargas R, Walker EF, Green P, Newport DJ, Stowe Z (2008) Maternal depression and infant cortisol: influences of timing, comorbidity and treatment. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 49:1099-107 CrossRef
    13. Cottrell EC, Seckl JR (2009) Prenatal stress, glucocorticoids and the programming of adult disease. Front Behav Neurosci 3:19 CrossRef
    14. Dilalla LF, Gheyara S, Bersted K (2013) The Southern Illinois Twins and Siblings Study (SITSS): description and update. Twin Res Hum Genet 16:371-75 CrossRef
    15. Ding YC, Chi HC, Grady DL, Morishima A, Kidd JR, Kidd KK, Flodman P, Spence MA, Schuck S, Swanson JM, Zhang YP, Moyzis RK (2002) Evidence of positive selection acting at the human dopamine receptor D4 gene locus. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99:309-14 CrossRef
    16. Docherty SJ, Davis OS, Haworth CM, Plomin R, D’Souza U, Mill J (2012) A genetic association study of DNA methylation levels in the DRD4 gene region finds associations with nearby SNPs. Behav Brain Funct 8:31 CrossRef
    17. Entringer S, Kumsta R, Hellhammer DH, Wadhwa PD, Wust S (2009) Prenatal exposure to maternal psychosocial stress and HPA axis regulation in young adults. Horm Behav 55:292-98 CrossRef
    18. Esser G, Blanz B, Geisel B, Laucht M (1989) Mannheim Parent Interview—structured interview for child psychiatric disorders. Beltz, Weinheim
    19. Fergusson DM, Boden JM, Horwood LJ, Miller AL, Kennedy MA (2011) MAOA, abuse exposure and antisocial behaviour: 30-year longitudinal study. Br J Psychiatry 198:457-63 CrossRef
    20. Field T, Diego M (2008) Cortisol: the culprit prenatal stress variable. Int J Neurosci 118:1181 CrossRef
    21. Glover V, O’Connor TG, O’Donnell K (2010) Prenatal stress and the programming of the HPA axis. Neurosci Biobehav Rev 35:17-2 CrossRef
    22. Gowin JL, Green CE, Alcorn JL III, Swann AC, Moeller FG, Lane SD (2013) The role of cortisol and psychopathy in the cycle of violence. Psychopharmacology (Berlin) 227:661-72 CrossRef
    23. Grizenko N, Fortier ME, Zadorozny C, Thakur G, Schmitz N, Duval R, Joober R (2012) Maternal stress during pregnancy, ADHD symptomatology in children and genotype: gene-environment interaction. J Can Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 21:9-5
    24. Hawes DJ, Brennan J, Dadds MR (2009) Cortisol, callous-unemotional traits, and pathways to antisocial behavior. Curr Opin Psychiatry 22:357-62 CrossRef
    25. Hay DF, Pawlby S, Waters CS, Perra O, Sharp D (2010) Mothers-antenatal depression and their children’s antisocial outcomes. Child Dev 81:149-65 CrossRef
    26. Hensleigh E, Pritchard LM (2013) Glucocorticoid receptor expression and sub-cellular localization in dopamine neurons of the rat midbrain. Neurosci Lett. doi: 10.1016/j.neulet.2013.09.067
    27. Huizink AC, Bartels M, Rose RJ, Pulkkinen L, Eriksson CJ, Kaprio J (2008) Chernobyl exposure as stressor during pregnancy and hormone levels in adolescent offspring. J Epidemiol Community Health 62:e5 CrossRef
    28. Jaffee SR, Strait LB, Odgers CL (2012) From correlates to causes: can quasi-experimental studies and statistical innovations bring us closer to identifying the causes of antisocial behavior? Psychol Bull 138:272-95 CrossRef
    29. Kazmi MA, Snyder LA, Cypess AM, Graber SG, Sakmar TP (2000) Selective reconstitution of human D4 dopamine receptor variants with Gi alpha subtypes. Biochemistry 39:3734-744 CrossRef
    30. Kirschbaum C, Pirke KM, Hellhammer DH (1993) The ‘Trier Social Stress Test’—a tool for investigating psychobiological stress responses in a laboratory setting. Neuropsychobiology 28:76-1 CrossRef
    31. Klengel T, Binder EB (2013) Allele-specific epigenetic modification: a molecular mechanism for gene-environment interactions in stress-related psychiatric disorders? Epigenomics 5:109-12 CrossRef
    32. Kudielka BM, Wüst S, Kirschbaum C, Hellhammer DH (2007) Trier Social Stress Test. In: Fink G (ed) Encyclopedia of stress. Academic Press, Oxford, pp 776-81 CrossRef
    33. Langley K, Turic D, Rice F, Holmans P, van den Bree MB, Craddock N, Kent L, Owen MJ, O’Donovan MC, Thapar A (2008) Testing for gene × environment interaction effects in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and associated antisocial behavior. Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet 147B:49-3 CrossRef
    34. Laucht M, Esser G, Schmidt MH (1997) Developmental outcome of infants born with biological and psychosocial risks. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 38:843-53 CrossRef
    35. Laucht M, Esser G, Baving L, Gerhold M, Hoesch I, Ihle W, Steigleider P, Stock B, Stoehr RM, Weindrich D, Schmidt MH (2000) Behavioral sequelae of perinatal insults and early family adversity at 8?years of age. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 39:1229-237 CrossRef
    36. Lichter JB, Barr CL, Kennedy JL, Van Tol HH, Kidd KK, Livak KJ (1993) A hypervariable segment in the human dopamine receptor D4 (DRD4) gene. Hum Mol Genet 2:767-73 CrossRef
    37. Maki P, Veijola J, Rasanen P, Joukamaa M, Valonen P, Jokelainen J, Isohanni M (2003) Criminality in the offspring of antenatally depressed mothers: a 33-year follow-up of the Northern Finland 1966 Birth Cohort. J Affect Disord 74:273-78 CrossRef
    38. Meaney MJ (2001) Maternal care, gene expression, and the transmission of individual differences in stress reactivity across generations. Annu Rev Neurosci 24:1161-192 CrossRef
    39. Müller R, Abbet JP (1991) Changing trends in the consumption of legal and illegal drugs by 11-6-year-old adolescent pupils. Findings from a study conducted under the auspices of the WHO Europe. Swiss Professional Service for Alcohol Problems, Lausanne
    40. Nederhof E, Belsky J, Ormel J, Oldehinkel AJ (2012) Effects of divorce on Dutch boys-and girls-externalizing behavior in gene × environment perspective: diathesis stress or differential susceptibility in the Dutch Tracking Adolescents-Individual Lives Survey study? Dev Psychopathol 24:929-39 CrossRef
    41. Nobile M, Giorda R, Marino C, Carlet O, Pastore V, Vanzin L, Bellina M, Molteni M, Battaglia M (2007) Socioeconomic status mediates the genetic contribution of the dopamine receptor D4 and serotonin transporter linked promoter region repeat polymorphisms to externalization in preadolescence. Dev Psychopathol 19:1147-160
    42. Oberlander TF, Weinberg J, Papsdorf M, Grunau R, Misri S, Devlin AM (2008) Prenatal exposure to maternal depression, neonatal methylation of human glucocorticoid receptor gene (NR3C1) and infant cortisol stress responses. Epigenetics 3:97-06 CrossRef
    43. O’Connor TG, Heron J, Golding J, Beveridge M, Glover V (2002) Maternal antenatal anxiety and children’s behavioural/emotional problems at 4?years. Report from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children. Br J Psychiatry 180:502-08 CrossRef
    44. O’Connor TG, Heron J, Golding J, Glover V (2003) Maternal antenatal anxiety and behavioural/emotional problems in children: a test of a programming hypothesis. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 44:1025-036 CrossRef
    45. O’Donnell KJ, Bugge JA, Freeman L, Khalife N, O’Connor TG, Glover V (2012) Maternal prenatal anxiety and downregulation of placental 11beta-HSD2. Psychoneuroendocrinology 37:818-26 CrossRef
    46. O’Donnell KJ, Glover V, Jenkins J, Browne D, Ben-Shlomo Y, Golding J, O’Connor TG (2013) Prenatal maternal mood is associated with altered diurnal cortisol in adolescence. Psychoneuroendocrinology 38:1630-638 CrossRef
    47. Platje E, Jansen LM, Raine A, Branje SJ, Doreleijers TA, de Vries-Bouw M, Popma A, van Lier PA, Koot HM, Meeus WH, Vermeiren RR (2013) Longitudinal associations in adolescence between cortisol and persistent aggressive or rule-breaking behavior. Biol Psychol 93:132-37 CrossRef
    48. Popma A, Vermeiren R, Geluk CA, Rinne T, van den Brink W, Knol DL, Jansen LM, van Engeland H, Doreleijers TA (2007) Cortisol moderates the relationship between testosterone and aggression in delinquent male adolescents. Biol Psychiatry 61:405-11 CrossRef
    49. Poustka L, Maras A, Hohm E, Fellinger J, Holtmann M, Banaschewski T, Lewicka S, Schmidt MH, Esser G, Laucht M (2010) Negative association between plasma cortisol levels and aggression in a high-risk community sample of adolescents. J Neural Transm 117:621-27 CrossRef
    50. Rutter M, Quinton D (1977) Psychiatric disorder—ecological factors and concepts of causation. In: McGurk M (ed) Ecological factors in human development. North Holland, Amsterdam, pp 173-87
    51. Seckl JR, Holmes MC (2007) Mechanisms of disease: glucocorticoids, their placental metabolism and fetal ‘programming-of adult pathophysiology. Nat Clin Pract Endocrinol Metab 3:479-88 CrossRef
    52. Turic D, Swanson J, Sonuga-Barke E (2010) DRD4 and DAT1 in ADHD: functional neurobiology to pharmacogenetics. Pharmgenomics Pers Med 3:61-8
    53. Tuvblad C, Baker LA (2011) Human aggression across the lifespan: genetic propensities and environmental moderators. Adv Genet 75:171-14 CrossRef
    54. Urizar GG Jr, Munoz RF (2011) Impact of a prenatal cognitive-behavioral stress management intervention on salivary cortisol levels in low-income mothers and their infants. Psychoneuroendocrinology 36:1480-494 CrossRef
    55. Witt SH, Buchmann AF, Blomeyer D, Nieratschker V, Treutlein J, Esser G, Schmidt MH, Bidlingmaier M, Wiedemann K, Rietschel M, Laucht M, Wust S, Zimmermann US (2011) An interaction between a neuropeptide Y gene polymorphism and early adversity modulates endocrine stress responses. Psychoneuroendocrinology 36:1010-020 CrossRef
    56. Wittchen HU, Zaudig M, Fydrich T (1997) Structured clinical interview for DSM-IV axis I and II-SCID. Hogrefe, G?ttingen
    57. Zohsel K, Buchmann AF, Blomeyer D, Hohm E, Schmidt MH, Esser G, Brandeis D, Banaschewski T, Laucht M (2013) Mothers-prenatal stress and their children’s antisocial outcomes—a moderating role for the dopamine D4 receptor (DRD4) gene. J Child Psychol Psychiatry. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.12138
    58. Zucchi FC, Yao Y, Ward ID, Ilnytskyy Y, Olson DM, Benzies K, Kovalchuk I, Kovalchuk O, Metz GA (2013) Maternal stress induces epigenetic signatures of psychiatric and neurological diseases in the offspring. PLoS One 8:e56967 CrossRef
  • 作者单位:Arlette F. Buchmann (1)
    Katrin Zohsel (1)
    Dorothea Blomeyer (1)
    Erika Hohm (1)
    Sarah Hohmann (1)
    Christine Jennen-Steinmetz (2)
    Jens Treutlein (3)
    Katja Becker (4)
    Tobias Banaschewski (1)
    Martin H. Schmidt (1)
    Günter Esser (5)
    Daniel Brandeis (1) (7) (8)
    Luise Poustka (1)
    Ulrich S. Zimmermann (6)
    Manfred Laucht (1) (5)

    1. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, J 5, 68159, Mannheim, Germany
    2. Department of Biostatistics, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany
    3. Department of Genetic Epidemiology in Psychiatry, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany
    4. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical Faculty, Philipps University Marburg, Marburg, Germany
    5. Department of Psychology, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany
    7. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Center for Integrative Human Physiology, Neuroscience Center Zurich, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
    8. ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
    6. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Technical University Dresden, Dresden, Germany
  • ISSN:1432-2072
文摘
Rationale Considerable evidence suggests that genetic factors combine with environmental influences to impact on the development of aggressive behavior. A genetic variant that has repeatedly been reported to render individuals more sensitive to the presence of adverse experiences, including stress exposure during fetal life, is the seven-repeat allele of the dopamine D4 receptor (DRD4) gene. Objectives The present investigation concentrated on the interplay of prenatal maternal stress and DRD4 genotype in predicting self-reported aggression in young adults. As disruption of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system has been discussed as a pathophysiological pathway to aggression, cortisol stress reactivity was additionally examined. Methods As part of an epidemiological cohort study, prenatal maternal stress was assessed by maternal interview 3?months after childbirth. Between the ages of 19 and 23?years, 298 offspring (140 males, 158 females) completed the Young Adult Self-Report to measure aggressive behavior and were genotyped for the DRD4 gene. At 19?years, 219 participants additionally underwent the Trier Social Stress Test to determine cortisol reactivity. Results Extending earlier findings with respect to childhood antisocial behavior, the results revealed that, under conditions of higher prenatal maternal stress, carriers of the DRD4 seven-repeat allele displayed more aggression in adulthood (p--.032). Moreover, the same conditions which seemed to promote aggression were found to predict attenuated cortisol secretion (p--.028). Conclusions This is the first study to indicate a long-term impact of prenatal stress exposure on the cortisol stress response depending on DRD4 genotype.
NGLC 2004-2010.National Geological Library of China All Rights Reserved.
Add:29 Xueyuan Rd,Haidian District,Beijing,PRC. Mail Add: 8324 mailbox 100083
For exchange or info please contact us via email.