PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Social stress that molds monkey immune system helps researchers understand how stress affects humans

2012-04-10
(Press-News.org) If a monkey's social status changes, her immune system changes along with it say researchers who conducted the study with rhesus macaques at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center. This finding may have implications for how the stress of low socioeconomic status affects human health and how individuals' bodies adapt after a shift in their social environment. The results are published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Early Edition.

Researchers led by Jenny Tung, PhD, say they can predict a rhesus macaque's rank within a small group by examining gene expression levels in her immune cells. Tung, who was at the University of Chicago during the study, is now assistant professor of evolutionary anthropology at Duke University. Her colleagues and senior authors on the paper include Yoav Gilad, PhD, associate professor of human genetics at the University of Chicago, and Mark Wilson, PhD, chief of the Division of Developmental and Cognitive Neuroscience at Yerkes and director of the center's Biomarkers Core Laboratory.

Primate researchers can tell macaques' social rank by watching them engage in competitive interactions, such as grooming and accessing food and water. Tung and her colleagues studied 10 groups of female macaques (five each) in which researchers could manipulate individuals' social rank. Before being placed into new groups, all of the macaques started out as middle rank.

"In the wild, macaques inherit their social rank from their mothers" Tung says. "But in our research, the order of introduction determines rank; the newcomer is generally lower status. When some macaques' status changed after a newcomer arrived, so did their patterns of immune system gene activity."

The researchers used microarrays, a technology that allows them to scan thousands of genes and read the expression levels, to look at the macaques' immune cells. The gene activity that changed the most depending on social rank was what controlled inflammation.

Previous studies have found lower status macaques have higher levels of inflammation and have changes in their levels of hormones that indicate they're under more stress.

Based on the pattern of gene activity, the researchers could, without looking at a monkey's identity, predict whether that animal was high (rank 1 or 2), middle or low (rank 4 or 5) with 80 percent accuracy.

Seven monkeys' social ranks changed because other individuals were moved. When this happened, the researchers were able to take blood samples before and after the shift. The gene scans revealed the pattern of immune system activity changed along with these monkeys' social ranks. Here, social rank post-shift could be predicted to 86 percent accuracy (six out of seven).

"There's a concerning side to this kind of research, in that an individual's social environment probably partially determines health status," Tung says. "But there's also a hopeful side. For the seven females that changed ranks, their gene status changed with them." Dr. Wilson added, "That they are not stuck in place says something more broadly about the capacity for change within human society. With these studies, we are showing we do have the ability to advance from our roots and live more healthful lives."

Tung and her colleagues plan to continue studying how social rank and stress in macaques affect immune responses and susceptibility to infection.

INFORMATION:

The National Institutes of Health supported this research.

Reference: J. Tung, L.B. Barreiro, Z.P. Johnson, K.D. Hansen, V. Michopoulos, D. Toufexis, K. Michelini, M.E. Wilson and Y. Gilad. Social environment is associated with gene regulatory variation in the rhesus macaque immune system. PNAS Early Edition (2012).

Writer: Quinn Eastman

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

2 genetic deletions in human genome linked to the development of aggressive prostate cancer

2012-04-10
NEW YORK (April 9, 2012 ) -- An international research team led by Weill Cornell Medical College investigators have discovered two inherited-genetic deletions in the human genome linked to development of aggressive prostate cancer. The findings, published online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), indicate a man's risk of developing prostate cancer either triples or quadruples, depending on the genetic variant they inherit. In the study, one genetic deletion is shown to affect the functioning of a known gene, while the other, found ...

Diet may treat some gene mutations

2012-04-10
BETHESDA, MD -- April 9, 2012 -- Scientists have moved a step closer to correcting some unhealthy gene mutations with diet, according to a new research report appearing in the April 2012 issue of the journal GENETICS (http://www.genetics.org/). Researchers from the University of California, Berkeley, determined variations and responses to vitamin treatment in the human cystathionine beta synthase gene, which when defective, causes the disease homocystinuria, an inherited metabolic disorder sometimes treatable with vitamin B6. After the analysis, scientists correlated specific ...

Summer temperature variability may increase mortality risk for elderly with chronic disease

2012-04-10
Boston, MA – New research from Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) suggests that seemingly small changes in summer temperature swings—as little as 1°C more than usual—may shorten life expectancy for elderly people with chronic medical conditions, and could result in thousands of additional deaths each year. While previous studies have focused on the short-term effects of heat waves, this is the first study to examine the longer-term effects of climate change on life expectancy. The study will be published online April 9, 2012 in the Proceedings of the National Academy ...

Discover the Best Real Money iPad Casinos at iPadCasinoGames.com

Discover the Best Real Money iPad Casinos at iPadCasinoGames.com
2012-04-10
The release of the new iPad must surely have convinced even the hardest of cynics that the Apple tablet computer is here to stay. This is particularly great news for mobile casino enthusiasts who like to play a quick game of blackjack, roulette, craps or slots while on the move. The success of the latest Apple tablet looks set to revolutionise the world of iPad Casinos in the near future. Most of us at this stage have played real money casino apps on our iPhone or Android smartphones and have enjoyed their many benefits. Blackjack, keno and video poker apps look and ...

UCF scientists use nanotechnology to hunt for hidden pathogens

UCF scientists use nanotechnology to hunt for hidden pathogens
2012-04-10
Researchers at the University of Central Florida have developed a novel technique that may give doctors a faster and more sensitive tool to detect pathogens associated with inflammatory bowel disease, including Crohn's disease. The new nanoparticle-based technique also may be used for detection of other microbes that have challenged scientists for centuries because they hide deep in human tissue and are able to reprogram cells to successfully evade the immune system. The microbes reappear years later and can cause serious health problems such as seen in tuberculosis ...

Novel compound demonstrates anti-leukemic effect in zebrafish, shows promise for human treatment

2012-04-10
(WASHINGTON, April 9, 2012) –A novel anti-leukemia compound with little toxicity successfully treated zebrafish with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL), suggesting its potential to become a new highly targeted therapy for humans – even those resistant to conventional therapies – according to results from a study published online today in Blood, the Journal of the American Society of Hematology (ASH). T-ALL is a cancer of the white blood cells in which genetic mutations cause normal immature T-cells to develop into leukemic cells, or "blasts." These blasts then ...

New research speaks to educational challenges

2012-04-10
WASHINGTON, April 9, 2012– Education research experts will unveil findings critical to the future of education at the upcoming AERA 2012 Annual Meeting, the largest gathering of education research experts in the world. More than 13,000 participants from over 60 countries plan to attend the meeting from April 13 through 17 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Researchers will present their latest findings in more than 2,400 sessions, invited lectures, and other events. New peer-reviewed research findings address a wide range of areas in education including the public ...

Social stress changes immune system gene expression in primates

2012-04-10
The ranking of a monkey within her social environment and the stress accompanying that status dramatically alters the expression of nearly 1,000 genes, a new scientific study reports. The research is the first to demonstrate a link between social status and genetic regulation in primates on a genome-wide scale, revealing a strong, plastic link between social environment and biology. In a comparison of high-ranking rhesus macaque females with their low-ranking companions, researchers discovered significant differences in the expression of genes involved in the immune response ...

AFTER 5 Biz Networking and Fundraising Reception April 13th

2012-04-10
Motiso Group's signature networking event, AFTER 5 Biz, is an elegant evening of networking, fundraising, and cocktails on April 13, 2012 at L2 Lounge in Washington, DC. Proceeds will benefit Motiso Group's mission to advance socially and economically disadvantaged businesses. AFTER 5 Biz is an initiative Motiso Group uses to connect minority and women entrepreneurs with a community of individual and business supporters. The premiere networking event occurs twice annually, with continued growth and support through an online networking platform. The network is targeted ...

Immune cells, 'macrophages' become activated by body temperature

2012-04-10
Macrophages playing an important role in the immune system eat and fight against pathogens and foreign substances in the very beginning of infection. In this condition, macrophages produce reactive oxygen species for sterilization. However, the relation with the temperature sensor was not previously known. Professor Makoto TOMINAGA from National Institute for Physiological Sciences (Okazaki Institute for Integrative Bioscience), National Institutes of Natural Sciences, and his research team member Ms. Makiko KASHIO have identified the mechanism through which TRPM2 is activated ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Cheap and environmentally friendly – the next generation LEDs may soon be here

Rare frog rediscovered after 130 years

Earth's 'dirty mirror' effect is accelerating climate change

Breakthrough in next-generation polio vaccines

A call for federally funded pediatric firearm injury prevention research

New research reveals how a 252 million year old climate crisis accompanied the ‘Great Dying’ mass extinction event, completely reorganizing the Earth’s ecosystems

Untangling quantum entanglement with new calculation formulas

Adults abused as children twice as likely to develop health and mental health conditions

A dive into erythritol slurry and its potential for waste heat recovery

No place like home—how proteins that plasma cells express at their origin affect migration

Socioeconomic factors fuel global inequalities in Alzheimer's disease burden, study finds

Foraging footballers suggest how we come together to act as one

SSA: Semantic Structure Aware Inference for Weakly Pixel-Wise Dense Predictions without Cost

New test helps doctors predict a dangerous side effect of cancer treatment

UC Study: Long sentences for juveniles make reentry into society more difficult

Death by feral cat: DNA shows cats to be culprits in killing of native animals

Plant Physiology is Searching for its Next Editor-in-Chief

Clothes dryers and the bottom line: Switching to air drying can save hundreds

New insights into tRNA-derived small RNAs offer hope for digestive tract disease diagnosis and treatment

Emotive marketing for sustainable consumption?

Prostate cancer is not a death knell, study shows

Unveiling the role of tumor-infiltrating immune cells in endometrial carcinoma

Traditional Chinese medicine unlocks new potential in treating diseases through ferroptosis regulation

MSU study pinpoints the impact of prenatal stress across 27 weeks of pregnancy

Biochemist’s impact on science and students honored

ELF4: A key transcription factor shaping immunity and cancer progression

Updated chronic kidney disease management guidelines recommend SGLT2 inhibitors regardless of diabetes or kidney disease type

New research explores how AI can build trust in knowledge work

Compound found in common herbs inspires potential anti-inflammatory drug for Alzheimer’s disease

Inhaled COVID vaccine begins recruitment for phase-2 human trials

[Press-News.org] Social stress that molds monkey immune system helps researchers understand how stress affects humans