4.7 Article

Social Origins of Developmental Risk for Mental and Physical Illness

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 45, Pages 10783-10791

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1822-17.2017

Keywords

EEG; foster care; limbic; neglect; parvalbumin; sex-dependent

Categories

Funding

  1. John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Network on Early Experience and Brain Development
  2. Binder Family Foundation
  3. Simms/Mann Institute and Simms/MannChair in Developmental Neurogenetics
  4. JPB Research Network on Toxic Stress: A Project of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University
  5. National Institutes of Health [MH41712, MH62931, MH091363, MH067842, UL1 TR001102, P50MH094271, F31MH100779]

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Adversity in early childhood exerts an enduring impact on mental and physical health, academic achievement, lifetime productivity, and the probability of interfacing with the criminal justice system. More science is needed to understand how the brain is affected by early life stress (ELS), which produces excessive activation of stress response systems broadly throughout the child's body (toxic stress). Our research examines the importance of sex, timing and type of stress exposure, and critical periods for intervention in various brain systems across species. Neglect (the absence of sensitive and responsive caregiving) or disrupted interaction with offspring induces robust, lasting consequences in mice, monkeys, and humans. Complementary assessment of internalizing disorders and brain imaging in children suggests that early adversity can interfere with white matter development in key brain regions, which may increase risk for emotional difficulties in the long term. Neural circuits that are most plastic during ELS exposure in monkeys sustain the greatest change in gene expression, offering a mechanism whereby stress timing might lead to markedly different long-term behaviors. Rodent models reveal that disrupted maternal-infant interactions yield metabolic and behavioral outcomes often differing by sex. Moreover, ELS may further accelerate or delay critical periods of development, which reflect GABA circuit maturation, BDNF, and circadian Clock genes. Such factors are associated with several mental disorders and may contribute to a premature closure of plastic windows for intervention following ELS. Together, complementary cross-species studies are elucidating principles of adaptation to adversity in early childhood with molecular, cellular, and whole organism resolution.

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