Literature DB >> 27188285

Stress transgenerationally programs metabolic pathways linked to altered mental health.

Douglas Kiss1, Mirela Ambeskovic1, Tony Montina2, Gerlinde A S Metz3.   

Abstract

Stress is among the primary causes of mental health disorders, which are the most common reason for disability worldwide. The ubiquity of these disorders, and the costs associated with them, lends a sense of urgency to the efforts to improve prediction and prevention. Down-stream metabolic changes are highly feasible and accessible indicators of pathophysiological processes underlying mental health disorders. Here, we show that remote and cumulative ancestral stress programs central metabolic pathways linked to mental health disorders. The studies used a rat model consisting of a multigenerational stress lineage (the great-great-grandmother and each subsequent generation experienced stress during pregnancy) and a transgenerational stress lineage (only the great-great-grandmother was stressed during pregnancy). Urine samples were collected from adult male F4 offspring and analyzed using 1H NMR spectroscopy. The results of variable importance analysis based on random variable combination were used for unsupervised multivariate principal component analysis and hierarchical clustering analysis, as well as metabolite set enrichment analysis (MSEA) and pathway analysis. We identified distinct metabolic profiles associated with the multigenerational and transgenerational stress phenotype, with consistent upregulation of hippurate and downregulation of tyrosine, threonine, and histamine. MSEA and pathway analysis showed that these metabolites are involved in catecholamine biosynthesis, immune responses, and microbial host interactions. The identification of metabolic signatures linked to ancestral programming assists in the discovery of gene targets for future studies of epigenetic regulation in pathogenic processes. Ultimately, this research can lead to biomarker discovery for better prediction and prevention of mental health disorders.

Entities:  

Keywords:  1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; Disease etiology; Metabolic profile; Metabolite set enrichment analysis; Multigenerational stress; Pathway analysis; Transgenerational stress

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27188285     DOI: 10.1007/s00018-016-2272-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci        ISSN: 1420-682X            Impact factor:   9.261


  61 in total

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8.  Maternal stress induces epigenetic signatures of psychiatric and neurological diseases in the offspring.

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2.  Prenatal Maternal Stress from a Natural Disaster Alters Urinary Metabolomic Profiles in Project Ice Storm Participants.

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3.  Ancestral Stress Alters Lifetime Mental Health Trajectories and Cortical Neuromorphology via Epigenetic Regulation.

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Review 5.  Towards a biochemical approach to occupational stress management.

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7.  Transgenerational inheritance of behavioral and metabolic effects of paternal exposure to traumatic stress in early postnatal life: evidence in the 4th generation.

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Review 8.  Environmentally induced epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease.

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10.  Ancestral stress programs sex-specific biological aging trajectories and non-communicable disease risk.

Authors:  Mirela Ambeskovic; Yaroslav Ilnytskyy; Douglas Kiss; Cheryl Currie; Tony Montina; Igor Kovalchuk; Gerlinde A S Metz
Journal:  Aging (Albany NY)       Date:  2020-02-22       Impact factor: 5.682

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