| Literature DB >> 25339875 |
Jeremy D Coplan1, Hassan M Fathy1, Andrea P Jackowski2, Cheuk Y Tang3, Tarique D Perera4, Sanjay J Mathew5, Jose Martinez6, Chadi G Abdallah7, Andrew J Dwork8, Gustavo Pantol3, David Carpenter3, Jack M Gorman9, Charles B Nemeroff10, Michael J Owens11, Arie Kaffman12, Joan Kaufman13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children exposed to early life stress (ELS) exhibit enlarged amygdala volume in comparison to controls. The primary goal of this study was to examine amygdala volumes in bonnet macaques subjected to maternal variable foraging demand (VFD) rearing, a well-established model of ELS. Preliminary analyses examined the interaction of ELS and the serotonin transporter gene on amygdala volume. Secondary analyses were conducted to examine the association between amygdala volume and other stress-related variables previously found to distinguish VFD and non-VFD reared animals.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; amygdala; early life stress; non-human primates; serotonin transporter gene; stress
Year: 2014 PMID: 25339875 PMCID: PMC4186477 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00342
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Time line and experimental procedure of the study. The figure outlines the time line of the developmental phase of the bonnet macaque male subjects and at which point interventions were performed. The bottom row provides the age of the subjects at the time of the experimental intervention.
Figure 2Coronal view of the amygdala outline in T1-weighted images. Images were aligned to the hippocampus axis. L, left hemisphere; R, right hemisphere.
Figure 3Gene × environment effect for amygdala volume in adversely-reared macaques possessing the short allele of the serotonin transporter gene. Using the GLM factorial design, a group effect for overall amygdala volume was noted [F(1, 15) = 5.65; p = 0.031] but no significant allele effect. A gene by environment effect [F(1, 15) = 4.89; p = 0.042] was noted. Using Fisher least-square differences post-hoc testing, VFD-reared macaques expressing the short allele of the serotonin transporter gene exhibited larger amygdala volume compared to unstressed controls with the “sl” allele [a > b; p = 0.019] or “ll” [a > c; p = 0.002] allele subjects and at a trend for ELS subjects with the long allele [a > d; p = 0.088]. Two subjects were non-VFD “sl” whereas six subjects were non-VFD “ll.” Five subjects were VFD “sl” and seven subjects were VFD “ll.”