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Mitochondrial Gene Expression Profiles Are Associated with Maternal Psychosocial Stress in Pregnancy and Infant Temperament

BACKGROUND: Gene-environment interactions mediate through the placenta and shape the fetal brain development. Between the environmental determinants of the fetal brain, maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy has been shown to negatively influence the infant temperament development. This in turn m...

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Autores principales: Lambertini, Luca, Chen, Jia, Nomura, Yoko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4587925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26418562
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138929
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author Lambertini, Luca
Chen, Jia
Nomura, Yoko
author_facet Lambertini, Luca
Chen, Jia
Nomura, Yoko
author_sort Lambertini, Luca
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Gene-environment interactions mediate through the placenta and shape the fetal brain development. Between the environmental determinants of the fetal brain, maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy has been shown to negatively influence the infant temperament development. This in turn may have adverse consequences on the infant neurodevelopment extending throughout the entire life-span. However little is known about the underlying biological mechanisms of the effects of maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy on infant temperament. Environmental stressors such as maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy activate the stress response cascade that in turn drives the increase in the cellular energy demand of vital organs with high metabolic rates such as, in pregnancy, the placenta. Key players of the stress response cascade are the mitochondria. RESULTS: Here, we tested the expression of all 13 protein-coding genes encoded by the mitochondria in 108 placenta samples from the Stress in Pregnancy birth cohort, a study that aims at determining the influence of in utero exposure to maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy on infant temperament. We showed that the expression of the protein-coding mitochondrial-encoded gene MT-ND2 was positively associated with indices of maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy including Prenatal Perceived Stress (β = 0.259; p-regression = 0.004; r(2)-regression = 0.120), State Anxiety (β = 0.218; p-regression = 0.003; r(2)-regression = 0.153), Trait Anxiety (β = 0.262; p-regression = 0.003; r(2)-regression = 0.129) and Pregnancy Anxiety Total (β = 0.208; p-regression = 0.010; r(2)-regression = 0.103). In the meantime MT-ND2 was negatively associated with the infant temperament indices of Activity Level (β = -0.257; p-regression = 0.008; r(2)-regression = 0.165) and Smile and Laughter (β = -0.286; p-regression = 0.036; r(2)-regression = 0.082). Additionally, MT-ND6 was associated with the maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy index of Prenatal Perceived Stress (β = -0.231; p-regression = 0.004; r(2)-regression = 0.120), while MT-CO2 was associated with the maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy indices of State Anxiety (β = 0.206; p-regression = 0.003; r(2)-regression = 0.153) and Trait Anxiety (β = 0.205; p-regression = 0.003; r(2)-regression = 0.129). CONCLUSIONS: Our data support the role of mitochondria in responding to maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy, as assessed in placenta, while also suggesting an important role for the mitochondria in the infant temperament development.
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spelling pubmed-45879252015-10-02 Mitochondrial Gene Expression Profiles Are Associated with Maternal Psychosocial Stress in Pregnancy and Infant Temperament Lambertini, Luca Chen, Jia Nomura, Yoko PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Gene-environment interactions mediate through the placenta and shape the fetal brain development. Between the environmental determinants of the fetal brain, maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy has been shown to negatively influence the infant temperament development. This in turn may have adverse consequences on the infant neurodevelopment extending throughout the entire life-span. However little is known about the underlying biological mechanisms of the effects of maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy on infant temperament. Environmental stressors such as maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy activate the stress response cascade that in turn drives the increase in the cellular energy demand of vital organs with high metabolic rates such as, in pregnancy, the placenta. Key players of the stress response cascade are the mitochondria. RESULTS: Here, we tested the expression of all 13 protein-coding genes encoded by the mitochondria in 108 placenta samples from the Stress in Pregnancy birth cohort, a study that aims at determining the influence of in utero exposure to maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy on infant temperament. We showed that the expression of the protein-coding mitochondrial-encoded gene MT-ND2 was positively associated with indices of maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy including Prenatal Perceived Stress (β = 0.259; p-regression = 0.004; r(2)-regression = 0.120), State Anxiety (β = 0.218; p-regression = 0.003; r(2)-regression = 0.153), Trait Anxiety (β = 0.262; p-regression = 0.003; r(2)-regression = 0.129) and Pregnancy Anxiety Total (β = 0.208; p-regression = 0.010; r(2)-regression = 0.103). In the meantime MT-ND2 was negatively associated with the infant temperament indices of Activity Level (β = -0.257; p-regression = 0.008; r(2)-regression = 0.165) and Smile and Laughter (β = -0.286; p-regression = 0.036; r(2)-regression = 0.082). Additionally, MT-ND6 was associated with the maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy index of Prenatal Perceived Stress (β = -0.231; p-regression = 0.004; r(2)-regression = 0.120), while MT-CO2 was associated with the maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy indices of State Anxiety (β = 0.206; p-regression = 0.003; r(2)-regression = 0.153) and Trait Anxiety (β = 0.205; p-regression = 0.003; r(2)-regression = 0.129). CONCLUSIONS: Our data support the role of mitochondria in responding to maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy, as assessed in placenta, while also suggesting an important role for the mitochondria in the infant temperament development. Public Library of Science 2015-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4587925/ /pubmed/26418562 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138929 Text en © 2015 Lambertini et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lambertini, Luca
Chen, Jia
Nomura, Yoko
Mitochondrial Gene Expression Profiles Are Associated with Maternal Psychosocial Stress in Pregnancy and Infant Temperament
title Mitochondrial Gene Expression Profiles Are Associated with Maternal Psychosocial Stress in Pregnancy and Infant Temperament
title_full Mitochondrial Gene Expression Profiles Are Associated with Maternal Psychosocial Stress in Pregnancy and Infant Temperament
title_fullStr Mitochondrial Gene Expression Profiles Are Associated with Maternal Psychosocial Stress in Pregnancy and Infant Temperament
title_full_unstemmed Mitochondrial Gene Expression Profiles Are Associated with Maternal Psychosocial Stress in Pregnancy and Infant Temperament
title_short Mitochondrial Gene Expression Profiles Are Associated with Maternal Psychosocial Stress in Pregnancy and Infant Temperament
title_sort mitochondrial gene expression profiles are associated with maternal psychosocial stress in pregnancy and infant temperament
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4587925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26418562
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138929
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