社区联系、同性恋恐惧症和种族主义如何影响携带和不携带艾滋病毒的性少数男性的基因表达。

IF 3.1 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY
Jenna Alley, Jeffrey Gassen, Luis A Parra, Michele D Kipke, Jeremy T Goldbach, Steven W Cole, George M Slavich
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:尽管性少数男性遭受了严重的歧视,而且还增加了一些严重的身心健康问题的风险,但这些影响背后的生物学机制尚不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们研究了社会安全(即社区联系)和社会威胁(即歧视,以同性恋恐惧症和种族主义的形式)的经历如何与逆境保守转录反应(CTRA)基因表达谱相关,以及这些关联是否因艾滋病毒状态而异,在一个特征明确、种族多样的性少数男性样本中(Mage = 22.61, SD = 1.90)。方法:通过自我报告评估社区联系、同性恋恐惧症和种族主义的经历,并在大约2年内的三个时间点采集血样。然后,我们使用这些血液样本来表征参与者的CTRA基因表达,我们使用来自外周血白细胞RNA测序数据的先验53转录物复合评分来量化CTRA基因表达。结果:正如假设的那样,随着时间的推移,更大的社区联系与CTRA基因表达的降低显著相关。无论HIV感染状况如何,这些影响都是相似的,并且对几个潜在混杂因素的统计调整是稳健的。相比之下,同性恋恐惧症和种族主义都与CTRA基因表达无关。结论:这些结果表明,社区联系可能是减少已知对健康产生负面影响的生物过程的保护因素。因此,旨在减少边缘化人群健康差距的干预措施和政策可能受益于加强社区联系和包容。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How community connection, homophobia, and racism shape gene expression in sexual minority men with and without HIV.

Objective: Although sexual minority men experience substantial discrimination, in addition to increased risk for several serious mental and somatic health problems, the biological mechanisms underlying these effects are unclear. To address this issue, we examined how experiences of social safety (i.e., community connection) and social threat (i.e., discrimination, in the forms of homophobia and racism) were related to conserved transcriptional response to adversity (CTRA) gene expression profiles across time, and whether these associations differed across HIV status, in a well-characterized, racially diverse sample of sexual minority men (Mage = 22.61, SD = 1.90).

Method: Experiences of community connection, homophobia, and racism were assessed via self-report, and blood samples were obtained at three timepoints over approximately 2 years. We then used these blood samples to characterize participants' CTRA gene expression, which we quantified using an a priori 53-transcript composite score derived from RNA sequencing data from peripheral blood leukocytes.

Results: As hypothesized, greater community connection was significantly related to decreased CTRA gene expression across time. These effects were similar regardless of HIV status and were robust to statistical adjustment for several potential confounding factors. In contrast, neither homophobia nor racism were related to CTRA gene expression.

Conclusion: These results suggest that community connection may be a protective factor that reduces biological processes known to negatively impact health. Consequently, interventions and policies aimed at reducing health disparities in marginalized populations may benefit from increasing community connection and inclusion. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

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来源期刊
Health Psychology
Health Psychology 医学-心理学
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
2.40%
发文量
170
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Psychology publishes articles on psychological, biobehavioral, social, and environmental factors in physical health and medical illness, and other issues in health psychology.
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