| Literature DB >> 24860550 |
Jayanthi Maniam1, Christopher Antoniadis1, Margaret J Morris1.
Abstract
Stress activates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which then modulates the degree of adaptation and response to a later stressor. It is known that early-life stress can impact on later health but less is known about how early-life stress impairs HPA axis activity, contributing to maladaptation of the stress-response system. Early-life stress exposure (either prenatally or in the early postnatal period) can impact developmental pathways resulting in lasting structural and regulatory changes that predispose to adulthood disease. Epidemiological, clinical, and experimental studies have demonstrated that early-life stress produces long term hyper-responsiveness to stress with exaggerated circulating glucocorticoids, and enhanced anxiety and depression-like behaviors. Recently, evidence has emerged on early-life stress-induced metabolic derangements, for example hyperinsulinemia and altered insulin sensitivity on exposure to a high energy diet later in life. This draws our attention to the contribution of later environment to disease vulnerability. Early-life stress can alter the expression of genes in peripheral tissues, such as the glucocorticoid receptor and 11-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11β-HSD1). We propose that interactions between altered HPA axis activity and liver 11β-HSD1 modulates both tissue and circulating glucocorticoid availability, with adverse metabolic consequences. This review discusses the potential mechanisms underlying early-life stress-induced maladaptation of the HPA axis, and its subsequent effects on energy utilization and expenditure. The effects of positive later environments as a means of ameliorating early-life stress-induced health deficits, and proposed mechanisms underpinning the interaction between early-life stress and subsequent detrimental environmental exposures on metabolic risk will be outlined. Limitations in current methodology linking early-life stress and later health outcomes will also be addressed.Entities:
Keywords: 11-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1; early-life stress; glucocorticoids; hyperinsulinemia; insulin signaling; liver; metabolic disorders
Year: 2014 PMID: 24860550 PMCID: PMC4026717 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2014.00073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Human early-life stress studies exploring metabolic outcomes.
| Early-life stressor | Participants | Offspring age | Exclusion criteria | Metabolic impact on offspring | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 137 adults, 74% reported parental holocaust exposure. Remainder considered unexposed controls | Middle-aged men and women | Psychosis, bipolar disorder, substance dependence | ↑ Reported use of medications, including psychotropic, antihypertensives, dyslipidemia medication | Flory et al. ( | |
| Organic mental disorder | ↑ Association with having two or more metabolic syndrome components, e.g., T2DM, hypertension, dyslipidemia or increased BMI | ||||
| Dementia; oral corticosteroids | |||||
| 58 offspring, of whom 36 exposed to maternal stress. Remaining 22 considered unexposed controls | Young adults | Pregnancy complication Smoker Acute or chronic health problems | ↑ BMI | Entringer et al. ( | |
| ↑ Very low-density lipoprotein (138%) | |||||
| ↓ High-density lipoprotein (16%) and low-density lipoprotein (33%) | |||||
| ↑ Fasting plasma insulin levels (58%) | |||||
| ↑ Plasma insulin 2-h post-oral glucose load (59%) | |||||
| ↑ C-peptide 2-h post-oral glucose load (40%) | |||||
| 111 Women pregnant during or conceived within 3 months of the Quebec ice storm | Children, 5.5 years of age | ↑ Obesity risk of offspring at 5.5 years old, associated with severity of objective maternal stress | Dancause et al. ( | ||
| Controlled for SES, pregnancy complications, breastfeeding, smoking, psychological function, and BMI | |||||
| 176 women pregnant during or conceived within 1 month of 1998 Quebec ice storm and their children | Children, mean age 13.5 years | Objective hardship positively correlated with insulin secretion ( | Dancause et al. ( | ||
| 1,878,246 people, of whom 45,302 were exposed to stress. Remaining considered unexposed controls | Offspring followed for 2–32 years | ↑ Risk for T2DM Second trimester identified as the most sensitive | Li et al. ( | ||
| 741 people born in Amsterdam before, during or after Dutch famine | Middle-aged men and women | Missing birth records | ↑ Bodyweight, BMI and waist circumference in women 50 years of age exposed to early gestation famine vs. non-exposed controls | Ravelli et al. ( | |
| Preterm birth (<37 weeks) | |||||
| Deceased | |||||
| Emigrated | |||||
| 702 people born in Amsterdam before, during or after Dutch famine | Middle-aged men and women | Missing birth records | Ravelli et al. ( | ||
| Preterm birth (<37 weeks) | ↑ Fasting proinsulin levels and 2-h glucose concentrations | ||||
| Diabetes | More pronounced if famine occurred during late gestation or with later life obesity | ||||
| Deceased | |||||
| Emigrated | |||||
| 152 women surveyed during pregnancy/first year of offspring life, predominantly low-income population | Infants | ↑ Risk of infant being overweight ( | Watt et al. ( | ||
| Correlation with consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages ( | |||||
| 1249 women, depressive symptoms assessed during pregnancy and postpartum | Children 3 years of age | Multiple gestation | Ertel et al. ( | ||
| Issues with English | Smaller body size | ||||
| Move prior to delivery | ↑ Central adiposity | ||||
| Gestational age greater than 22 weeks at first prenatal visit | |||||
| ↑ Overall adiposity | |||||
| Independent of SES, BMI, and health condition during pregnancy | |||||
| 135 bariatric surgery candidates | Middle-aged men and women | Substance abuse | ↑ Risk of metabolic syndrome following childhood parental loss ( | Alciati et al. ( | |
| Severe personality disorder | |||||
| Mental retardation | |||||
| 841 Children across 425 low-income households | Children, 3–17 years old | Households above 200% of poverty line | ↑ Risk of offspring 3–10 years old being overweight or obese in food secure environments compared to periods of food insecurity (43.7%) | Gundersen et al. ( | |
| 67,853 women in Nurses Health Study II | 25–42 | Dose–response association between child physical and sexual abuse with adult T2DM. Hazard ratio for diabetes in child exposed to mild, moderate and severe are 1.03, 1.26 and 1.54 respectively | Rich-Edwards et al. ( | ||
| 32 years | Individuals with plasma c-reactive protein >10 mg/l | ↑ Inflammation assessed by c-reactive protein | Danese et al. ( | ||
| 342 from study of women health across the nation (SWAN) | 45.7 year (mean age) | Physical abuse was associated with increased plasma triglyceride and blood pressure | Midei et al. ( | ||
| 756 from population based study | Young adult (19–20 years) | ↑ BMI in those exposed to neglect during childhood | Lissau and Sorensen ( | ||
| Odds ratio 9.8 CI 1.35–28.2 | |||||
| 9310 of 1958 British birth cohort | 45 years | ↑ BMI | Thomas et al. ( | ||
| ↑ HbA1C ≥6 | |||||
| ↑ Central obesity |
Figure 2The combination of early-life stress exposure with altered later environment may determine metabolic outcomes. Early-life stress (ELS) exposure during gestation or the postnatal period is hypothesized to influence an offspring’s response to later environments (85, 87). This programing occurs in an attempt to facilitate habituation and resilience to future similar situations. Offspring exposed to environments that do not differ to that to which they were exposed during early life, i.e., “matched” or positive environments, such as exposure to exercise have been shown to adapt and demonstrate resilience (74, 114, 131, 132). Conversely, exposure to a negative environment, i.e., “mismatched,” such as a sub-optimal diet (131, 132, 134) or chronic stress following ELS may lead to maladaptation, and metabolic deficits, with increased levels of triglycerides, free fatty acids, adiposity, and insulin resistance as measured by HOMA-IR. Thus, there is a pendulum of vulnerability and the trajectory following ELS is influenced by the later life environment.
Postnatal early-life stress and metabolic consequences in rodents.
| Offspring | Stress protocol | Other interventions | Metabolic consequences | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male Wistar rats | Bernardi et al. ( | |||
| PND35 to cull: | ||||
| ↑ Plasma leptin | ||||
| ↑ Fasting plasma insulin | ||||
| ↑ HOMA-IR index | ||||
| Male Sprague-Dawley rats | Ryu et al. ( | |||
| ↑ Bodyweight from PND42 | ||||
| ↑ Food intake at PND42 and 56 | ||||
| No significant effect on weight gain with isolation | ||||
| Female Sprague-Dawley rats | No change in bodyweight | Miki et al. ( | ||
| ↑ Prohibitin mRNA in MS rats compared to control ( | ||||
| ↓ β3-Adrenergic receptor mRNA in MS rats compared to control ( | ||||
| No change in UCP-1 mRNA across groups | ||||
| Male and female Sprague-Dawley rats | Maniam and Morris ( | |||
| ↓ Hippocampal GR mRNA expression | ||||
| Reversed with HFD or exercise | ||||
| ↑ Plasma insulin | ||||
| ↓ Total WAT per gram bodyweight | ||||
| ↓ Plasma corticosterone following restraint stress | ||||
| ↓ Plasma insulin | ||||
| Male and female Wistar rats | Mela et al. ( | |||
| Reversed by HFD consumption | ||||
| ↑ Hypothalamic IL-1β and TNF-α mRNA | ||||
| ↑ HOMA-IR | ||||
| Male and female Wistar rats | Viveros et al. ( | |||
| ↓ Bodyweight until 40–50 days of age | ||||
| ↓ Plasma leptin at PND75 | ||||
| ↓ Plasma testosterone | ||||
| ↓ PPAR-α mRNA in perirenal adipose tissue at PND35 | ||||
| ↓ Plasma adiponectin at PND75 | ||||
| Male and female Sprague-Dawley rats | Avishai-Eliner et al. ( | |||
| ↑ Plasma corticosterone and adrenal weight | ||||
| ↓ CRH mRNA in hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus | ||||
| ↓ GR mRNA in hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus and frontal cortex | ||||
| Female Wistar rats | Machado et al. ( | |||
| Following which rats underwent a 24-h food preference test | ||||
| Prior chronic exposure to HFD did not decrease preference for palatable food in LN rats, whereas control demonstrated reduced preference for HFD | ||||
| Male and female C56BL/6J mice | Rice et al. ( | |||
| ↑ Plasma corticosterone | ||||
| ↓ CRH mRNA in hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus | ||||
| Restored bodyweight | ||||
| ↑ Plasma corticosterone | ||||
| ↓ CRH mRNA in hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus |
Figure 1How does ELS increase the risk for insulin resistance and hyperglycemia? Early-life stress (ELS) induced by three different paradigms including maternal deprivation, maternal separation, and limited nesting material are known to dysregulate HPA axis activity, with limited data on the effects of ELS on hypothalamic feeding neuropeptides and inflammation. It is proposed that ELS disturbs circulating glucocorticoids (GC) through a combined action of HPA axis activity, hypothalamic feeding neuropeptides, and inflammatory changes. The effects of ELS on liver 11β-HSD1, an enzyme that converts inactive GC to active GC, and 5α-reductase, an enzyme involved in GC metabolism, is less known. It is proposed that during the maladaptation period, ELS affects tissue levels of these enzymes, thus increasing exposure of peripheral tissues to GC. Excess GC availability can alter insulin signaling, leading to hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance over time. Thus, increases in circulating and tissue GC induced by ELS act synergistically to exacerbate insulin resistance in peripheral tissues and alter energy expenditure and utilization. ELS, early-life stress; MD, maternal deprivation; MS, maternal separation; LN, limited nesting material; GC, glucocorticoids; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor alpha; IL-6, interleukin 6; IL-1β, interleukin-1 beta; 11β-HSD1, 11-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase.