Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Monitoring social interactions between individuals in large, high-density groups poses several challenges. Here we demonstrate that relative concentrations of serotonin (5-Hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) and its principal catabolite 5-Hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) in brain tissue of individual fish reflect social organisation in large groups of farmed Atlantic salmon. In the central nervous system of vertebrates, the monoamine neurotransmitter/neuromodulator 5-HT is critical for maintaining adaptive physiological, cognitive and emotional processes. In both teleost fish and mammals it has previously been shown that social interactions in small groups lead to elevated 5-HT release and/or metabolism in subordinate individuals, as indicated by the 5-HIAA/5-HT concentration ratio. In the current study, evidence is presented of non-linear dominance hierarchies in farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) kept at high rearing densities. The physiological effect of these hierarchies was decreased when food resources were abundant, although some subordinate fish still showed altered brain serotonergic activity and failed to grow even feed was available in excess. The largest effect of decreased feed rations was seen in fish of intermediate size, where competition appeared to increase with reduced access to feed. The largest individuals in each rearing unit showed low 5-HIAA/5-HT ratios independent of feeding regime. A novel observation, with respect to previous studies, was that elevated brain 5-HIAA/5-HT ratios resulted from decreased 5-HT concentrations rather than elevated 5-HIAA in small fish. Thus, in light of the serotonin deficit hypothesis of
depression
, it cannot be excluded that
social stress
is important for animal welfare even in large, relatively homogenous groups of animals reared in captivity.
...
PMID:Social hierarchies, growth and brain serotonin metabolism in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) kept under commercial rearing conditions. 1847 83
Depression
and coronary heart disease (CHD) are leading contributors to disease burden in women. CHD and
depression
are comorbid; whether they have common etiology or
depression
causes CHD is unclear. The underlying pathology of CHD, coronary artery atherosclerosis (CAA), is present decades before CHD, and the temporal relationship between
depression
and CAA is unclear. The evidence of involvement of
depression
in early CAA in cynomolgus monkeys, an established model of CAA and
depression
, is summarized. Like people, monkeys may respond to the stress of low social status with depressive behavior accompanied by perturbations in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA), autonomic nervous system, lipid metabolism, ovarian, and neural serotonergic system function, all of which are associated with exacerbated CAA. The primate data are consistent with the hypothesis that
depression
may cause CAA, and also with the hypothesis that CAA and
depression
may be the result of
social stress
. More study is needed to discriminate between these two possibilities. The primate data paint a compelling picture of
depression
as a whole-body disease.
...
PMID:Stress, depression, and coronary artery disease: modeling comorbidity in female primates. 1861 99
Consumption of 1% sucrose solution supplemented with 0.2% vanillin was studied in two experimental contexts in male mice living under chronic
social stress
induced by daily experience of defeats in agonistic interactions and leading to development of
depression
. In the first experiment, vanillin sucrose solution was made available as an option along with water during 10 days for mice living in group home cages. Then the mice were subjected to repeated social defeat stress and during exposure to stress they were provided with both vanillin sucrose solution and water using a free two-bottle choice paradigm. In the other experiment, vanillin sucrose solution was first offered to mice after 8 days of exposure to social defeat stress. Males familiar with vanillin sucrose solution showed vanillin sucrose preference while experiencing defeat stress: consumption of vanillin sucrose solution was about 70% of total liquid consumption. However, the consumption of vanillin sucrose solution per gram of body weight in mice exposed to
social stress
during 20 days was significantly lower than in control males. In the second experiment, males after 8 days of social defeat stress were found to consume significantly less vanillin sucrose solution as compared to control males. On average, during two weeks of measurements, vanillin sucrose solution intake was less than 20% of total liquid consumption in males. Consumption per gram of body weight also appeared to be significantly lower than in control group. The influence of experimental context on the development of anhedonia measured as a reduction of sucrose solution intake by chronically stressed male mice is discussed.
...
PMID:[Influence of experimental context on the development of anhedonia in male mice exposed to chronic social stress]. 1866 86
Mood and anxiety disorders are considered stress-related diseases characterized by an impaired function of mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid receptors (MR and GR, respectively), the major regulatory elements of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis. A number of so-called chaperone proteins moderate the function of these receptors. Genetic variations in one of these chaperones, FKBP5, were associated with antidepressant treatment response in
depression
and with a major risk-factor for the development of posttraumatic stress disorder. To further investigate the effect of FKPB5 polymorphisms on corticosteroid receptor-mediated HPA axis regulation we conducted the Trier
Social Stress
test, a standardized procedure to evaluate psychosocial stress response, in 64 healthy volunteers. We genotyped rs4713916, rs1360780 and rs3800737, the three single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the FKBP5 region which had shown the strongest effect in previous studies. In addition, we evaluated the effects of the GR polymorphisms Bcl1 and N363S as well as the MR polymorphism I180V. Subjects homozygous for any of the FKBP5 variants displayed an incomplete normalization of the stress-elicited cortisol secretion. This was also observed following a second test additionally accompanied by an increased self-reported anxiety. Regarding GR and MR, only carriers of the Bcl1 variant displayed an altered cortisol response in the prognosticated direction. While Bcl1 was predominantly associated with anticipatory cortisol, homozygous carriers of the FKBP5 minor allele showed insufficient cortisol recovery and increased self-reported anxiety after psychosocial stress. This reaction pattern suggests that subjects carrying these variants are at risk of displaying chronically elevated cortisol levels after repeated stress constituting a risk factor for stress-related diseases.
...
PMID:Polymorphisms in the FKBP5 gene region modulate recovery from psychosocial stress in healthy controls. 1870 10
This study investigated the influence of situational and dispositional factors on attentional biases toward social threat, and the impact of these attentional biases on distress in a sample of adolescents. The results suggest greater biases for personally relevant threat cues, as individuals reporting high
social stress
were vigilant to subliminal social threat cues, but not physical threat cues, and those reporting low
social stress
showed no attentional biases. Individual differences in fearful temperament and attentional control interacted to influence attentional biases, with fearful temperament predicting biases to supraliminal social threat only for individuals with poor attentional control. Multivariate analyses exploring relations between attentional biases for social threat and symptoms of anxiety and
depression
revealed that attentional biases alone were rarely related to symptoms. However, biases did interact with
social stress
, fearful temperament, and attentional control to predict distress. The results are discussed in terms of automatic and effortful cognitive mechanisms underlying threat cue processing.
...
PMID:Traits, states, and attentional gates: temperament and threat relevance as predictors of attentional bias to social threat. 1879 5
The purpose of this study was to examine the role of catastrophizing as a mediator and moderator between life stress and
depression
in a sample of workers' compensation patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain. Pain intensity, life stress (especially work and financial stress), and catastrophizing contributed significantly to
depression
. Catastrophizing was found to be partially mediating the relationship between life stress and
depression
and a moderator between
social stress
and
depression
. The results supported the role of catastrophizing as a cognitive vulnerability-stress factor related to
depression
in chronic pain patients. Screening for life stress and intervening early to prevent catastrophizing from occurring in the workers' compensation rehabilitation process may reduce psychosocial distress and enhance the overall effectiveness of rehabilitation programming for workers' compensation patients with chronic pain.
...
PMID:Catastrophizing as a cognitive vulnerability factor related to depression in workers' compensation patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain. 1910 63
This paper employs community-level data to examine the relationship between suicide behaviors, measured at age eleven, and two mental health outcomes assessed nine-years later. Specifically, we assess the role and significance of suicide ideation and suicide attempts in substance dependence and depressive symptomatology. We evaluate these linkages in the context of two hypothesized mediators: exposure to
social stress
and T-1 depressive symptoms. Results indicate suicide ideation and attempts are significant predictors of later mental health problems. However, controlling for T-1
depression
and stress exposure explains away the relationship between suicide attempts and later mental health. In contrast, suicide ideation remained a robust predictor of
depression
and drug dependence. The implications of these findings are discussed.
...
PMID:The relationship between early suicide behaviors and mental health: results from a nine-year panel study. 1927 40
Epidemiological studies demonstrate that affective disorders are at least twice as common in women as in men, but surprisingly, very few preclinical studies have been conducted on female experimental animals. Therefore, the necessity of developing valid animal models for studying the pathophysiology of stress-related disorders in women is obvious. Chronic
social stress
has the potential to induce
depression
in humans and therefore we characterize here a chronic social instability stress paradigm in female rats. This consists of a 4-week period with alternating stressful social situations, including phases of isolation and crowding, in an unpredictable manner. At the physiological level, increased adrenal weight and plasma corticosterone levels indicated hyperactivity of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis. Elevated plasma luteinizing hormone and disruption of the estrus cycle together with increased serum prolactin levels revealed disrupted regulation of the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal axis. Body temperature regulation was affected during the last week of stress such that stressed rats reduced their body temperature less during the rest phase than the controls, thus exhibiting a flattened temperature curve. Behaviorally, chronically stressed rats showed reduced sucrose preference and food intake. However, we did not observe any effect of stress on performance in the forced swim test and hippocampal neurotrophin levels were similarly unaffected. Our results indicate that, by using this social instability paradigm, female rats can be kept under chronic stress for weeks without habituation, and that ultimately the animals develop a depressive-like phenotype. This model may provide a valuable tool for further analyses of the neurobiology of stress-related disorders in women and has the potential to serve as a paradigm for screening novel antidepressant drugs with special efficacy in women.
...
PMID:Chronic social instability stress in female rats: a potential animal model for female depression. 1935 82
Escitalopram (ES-CIT) is a widely used, highly specific antidepressant. Until now there has been very little evidence on how this drug under pathological conditions affects an important feature within the pathophysiology of stress-related disorders such as
depression
: the endogenous neurotrophins. By using a well-characterized rat model in which chronic stress induces depressive-like behavior, the levels of neurotrophins brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and nerve growth factor (NGF) were determined in representative brain regions and serum using a highly sensitive improved fluorometric two-site ELISA system. There was a significant increase of BDNF in the left and right cortices after stress treatment (twofold increase) that was reversed by application of ES-CIT. An ES-CIT-dependent NGF reduction in stressed rats was detectable in the right cortex only (P = 0.027). The left hippocampus revealed significantly higher amounts of BDNF (2.5-fold increase) protein than the right hippocampus. These interhemispheric differences were unrelated to stress or ES-CIT treatment in all animals. BDNF and NGF of the frontal cortex, cerebellum, and serum did not change between the study groups. There was a negative correlation between body weight and serum BDNF, independent of stress or ES-CIT treatment. In conclusion, BDNF and NGF show substantial changes in this rodent model of chronic
social stress
, which is susceptible to antidepressant treatment with ES-CIT and therefore may constitute a neurobiological correlate for the disease.
...
PMID:Effects of escitalopram on the regulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and nerve growth factor protein levels in a rat model of chronic stress. 1936 Sep 2
Socio-economic features of a community influence people's health. However, not all inhabitants are affected similarly. The present study explores gendered contextual effects on problem drinking and
depression
with the differential exposure, vulnerability and expression hypotheses of the
social stress
model in mind. Analyses are based on the pooled data of the Belgian Health Interview Survey 2001 and 2004 (N=21.367 respondents, N=589 municipalities). Results reveal that living in an area with high unemployment is more detrimental for women in terms of
depression
, but has the same impact on men and women when problem drinking is the outcome.
...
PMID:Mental health in a gendered context: Gendered community effect on depression and problem drinking. 1945
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>