2019
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1820846116
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Social history and exposure to pathogen signals modulate social status effects on gene regulation in rhesus macaques

Abstract: Social experience is an important predictor of disease susceptibility and survival in humans and other social mammals. Chronic social stress is thought to generate a proinflammatory state characterized by elevated antibacterial defenses and reduced investment in antiviral defense. Here we manipulated long-term social status in female rhesus macaques to show that social subordination alters the gene expression response to ex vivo bacterial and viral challenge. As predicted by current models, bacterial lipopolys… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(36 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
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“…Interestingly, almost all sites (35 of 38) tended to be associated with adversity occurring at ≤3 y of age compared with more recent events (37). These studies suggest that the timing of an early experience plays a role in biological embedding, although we note that the biological embedding of experience can occur across the lifespan (38).…”
Section: Dna Modificationsmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Interestingly, almost all sites (35 of 38) tended to be associated with adversity occurring at ≤3 y of age compared with more recent events (37). These studies suggest that the timing of an early experience plays a role in biological embedding, although we note that the biological embedding of experience can occur across the lifespan (38).…”
Section: Dna Modificationsmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Sanz et al (75) show that the response of the rhesus macaque immune system is affected by current social conditions and a biological memory of past conditions. A history of social subordination in female rhesus monkeys changes the blood geneexpression responses to experimentally induced bacterial and viral challenges.…”
Section: Content Of the Special Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, various forms of social adversity are associated with elevated expression of proinflammatory genes and decreased expression of genes related to innate immune responses in humans [69] and rhesus macaques [70]. Low macaque dominance rank, for instance, has been causally linked to altered glucocorticoid and immune regulation and a polarisation of some immune pathways towards a proinflammatory response [71][72][73][74]. Immune signatures of social status in macaques and ageing in humans have also been shown to overlap substantially in their transcriptional profiles [75], suggesting that chronic social adversity may accelerate physiological aging.…”
Section: Ageing Across the Bodymentioning
confidence: 99%