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确定将早期生活压力与心理心血管代谢性多疾病联系起来的因果机制:早期原因项目。

Identifying causative mechanisms linking early-life stress to psycho-cardio-metabolic multi-morbidity: The EarlyCause project.

机构信息

Department of Psychological Medicine, Stress, Psychiatry and Immunology Laboratory, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.

Department of Epidemiology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2021 Jan 21;16(1):e0245475. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0245475. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Depression, cardiovascular diseases and diabetes are among the major non-communicable diseases, leading to significant disability and mortality worldwide. These diseases may share environmental and genetic determinants associated with multimorbid patterns. Stressful early-life events are among the primary factors associated with the development of mental and physical diseases. However, possible causative mechanisms linking early life stress (ELS) with psycho-cardio-metabolic (PCM) multi-morbidity are not well understood. This prevents a full understanding of causal pathways towards the shared risk of these diseases and the development of coordinated preventive and therapeutic interventions.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS

This paper describes the study protocol for EarlyCause, a large-scale and inter-disciplinary research project funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme. The project takes advantage of human longitudinal birth cohort data, animal studies and cellular models to test the hypothesis of shared mechanisms and molecular pathways by which ELS shapes an individual's physical and mental health in adulthood. The study will research in detail how ELS converts into biological signals embedded simultaneously or sequentially in the brain, the cardiovascular and metabolic systems. The research will mainly focus on four biological processes including possible alterations of the epigenome, neuroendocrine system, inflammatome, and the gut microbiome. Life-course models will integrate the role of modifying factors as sex, socioeconomics, and lifestyle with the goal to better identify groups at risk as well as inform promising strategies to reverse the possible mechanisms and/or reduce the impact of ELS on multi-morbidity development in high-risk individuals. These strategies will help better manage the impact of multi-morbidity on human health and the associated risk.

摘要

简介

抑郁症、心血管疾病和糖尿病是主要的非传染性疾病,在全球范围内导致了大量的残疾和死亡。这些疾病可能具有与多种疾病模式相关的共同环境和遗传决定因素。早期生活压力是导致精神和身体疾病发展的主要因素之一。然而,将早期生活压力(ELS)与心理-心血管-代谢(PCM)多重疾病联系起来的可能因果机制尚不清楚。这使得我们无法充分了解这些疾病共享风险的因果途径,并制定协调的预防和治疗干预措施。

方法和分析

本文介绍了早期因果关系(EarlyCause)研究项目的研究方案,该项目由欧盟 2020 地平线研究和创新计划资助。该项目利用人类纵向出生队列数据、动物研究和细胞模型,测试 ELS 如何在成年期塑造个体身心健康的共同机制和分子途径的假设。该研究将详细研究 ELS 如何转化为同时或顺序嵌入大脑、心血管和代谢系统中的生物信号。该研究将主要关注四个生物学过程,包括表观基因组、神经内分泌系统、炎症小体和肠道微生物组可能发生的改变。生命历程模型将整合性别、社会经济和生活方式等修饰因素的作用,旨在更好地识别高危人群,并提供有希望的策略来逆转可能的机制,或减轻 ELS 对高危个体多疾病发展的影响。这些策略将有助于更好地管理多疾病对人类健康和相关风险的影响。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ad89/7819604/104d23a63e22/pone.0245475.g001.jpg

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