Jan Dahrendorff, Agaz Wani, Thomas Keller, Don Armstrong, Annie Qu, Derek E Wildman, Maria Carmen Valero, Karestan C Koenen, Allison E Aiello, Monica Uddin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common and debilitating psychiatric disorder that may occur in individuals exposed to traumatic events such as accidents, interpersonal violence, war, combat, or natural disasters. Additionally, PTSD has been implicated in the development of a variety of chronic conditions including cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, suggesting that the biological alterations associated with the disorder can manifest themselves as chronic diseases in those suffering from PTSD. The biological underpinnings of the disorder are not well understood. Gene expression studies can illuminate the complex physiology of PTSD reflecting the embodiment of trauma, i.e., the process in which traumatic experiences in our social environments could potentially be manifested in our body by genomic mechanisms. To date, gene expression studies that examine the whole transcriptome are scarce and limited to single-timepoint assessments. Here we applied a transcriptome-wide gene expression screen with RNA-sequencing to whole blood samples from predominantly African-American participants in a community-dwelling setting to elucidate the gene expression signatures associated with the development of PTSD. The study participants (N=72, of whom 21 eventually developed PTSD) are a trauma-exposed subsample of participants enrolled in a longitudinal and prospective cohort study of adults living in Detroit, Michigan. PTSD was assessed in a structured telephone interview and whole blood samples were taken both before and after trauma exposure. We found 45 differentially expressed genes associated with PTSD development with an estimated log2 fold change > 1.5 at a nominal p-value (pPAX6, TSPAN7, PXDN, VWC2, SULF1, and NFATC4 were also ubiquitously expressed in all brain regions. Longitudinal sampling provides a promising mean to elucidate the pathophysiology underlying the embodiment of trauma.
期刊介绍:
Human Biology publishes original scientific articles, brief communications, letters to the editor, and review articles on the general topic of biological anthropology. Our main focus is understanding human biological variation and human evolution through a broad range of approaches.
We encourage investigators to submit any study on human biological diversity presented from an evolutionary or adaptive perspective. Priority will be given to interdisciplinary studies that seek to better explain the interaction between cultural processes and biological processes in our evolution. Methodological papers are also encouraged. Any computational approach intended to summarize cultural variation is encouraged. Studies that are essentially descriptive or concern only a limited geographic area are acceptable only when they have a wider relevance to understanding human biological variation.
Manuscripts may cover any of the following disciplines, once the anthropological focus is apparent: human population genetics, evolutionary and genetic demography, quantitative genetics, evolutionary biology, ancient DNA studies, biological diversity interpreted in terms of adaptation (biometry, physical anthropology), and interdisciplinary research linking biological and cultural diversity (inferred from linguistic variability, ethnological diversity, archaeological evidence, etc.).