4.6 Article

Childhood Chronic Physical Aggression Associates with Adult Cytokine Levels in Plasma

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 8, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069481

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Genes, Environment and Health Training Program from Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  3. Social Sciences Humanities Research Council of Canada
  4. Quebec Health Research Fund (FRSQ)
  5. Quebec Social Science and Culture Fund (FQRSC)
  6. Sackler Program in Psychobiology and Epigenetics at McGill University
  7. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research

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Background: An increasing number of animal and human studies are indicating that inflammation is associated with behavioral disorders including aggression. This study investigates the association between chronic physical aggression during childhood and plasma cytokine levels in early adulthood. Methodology/Principal Findings: Two longitudinal studies were used to select males on a chronic physical aggression trajectory from childhood to adolescence (n = 7) and a control group from the same background (n = 25). Physical aggression was assessed yearly by teachers from childhood to adolescence and plasma levels of 10 inflammatory cytokines were assessed at age 26 and 28 years. Compared to the control group, males on a chronic physical aggression trajectory from childhood to adolescence had consistently lower plasma levels of five cytokines: lower pro-inflammatory interleukins IL-1 alpha (T(28.7) = 3.48, P=0.002) and IL-6 (T(26.9) = 3.76, P=0.001), lower anti-inflammatory interleukin IL-4 (T(27.1) = 4.91, P=0.00004) and IL-10 (T(29.8) = 2.84, P=0.008) and lower chemokine IL-8 (T(26) = 3.69, P=0.001). The plasma levels of four cytokines accurately predicted aggressive and control group membership for all subjects. Conclusions/Significance: Physical aggression of boys during childhood is a strong predictor of reduced plasma levels of cytokines in early adulthood. The causal and physiological relations underlying this association should be further investigated since animal data suggest that some cytokines such as IL-6 and IL-1 beta play a causal role in aggression.

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