Public Health Laboratories, Hellenic Pasteur Institute, Vas. Sofias Avenue 127, 115 21, Athens, Greece.
Department of Neurology, University of Thessaly, Panepistimiou 3, Viopolis, 41 500, Larissa, Greece.
Transl Psychiatry. 2021 Feb 18;11(1):130. doi: 10.1038/s41398-021-01257-2.
The pervasive and frequently devastating nature of aggressive behavior calls for a collective effort to understand its psychosocial and neurobiological underpinnings. Regarding the latter, diverse brain areas, neural networks, neurotransmitters, hormones, and candidate genes have been associated with antisocial and aggressive behavior in humans and animals. This review focuses on the role of monoamine oxidases (MAOs) and the genes coding for them, in the modulation of aggression. During the past 20 years, a substantial number of studies using both pharmacological and genetic approaches have linked the MAO system with aggressive and impulsive behaviors in healthy and clinical populations, including the recent discovery of MAALIN, a long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) regulating the MAO-A gene in the human brain. Here, we first provide an overview of the MAOs and their physiological functions, we then summarize recent key findings linking MAO-related enzymatic and gene activity and aggressive behavior, and, finally, we offer novel insights into the mechanisms underlying this association. Using the existing experimental evidence as a foundation, we discuss the translational implications of these findings in clinical practice and highlight what we believe are outstanding conceptual and methodological questions in the field. Ultimately, we propose that unraveling the specific role of MAO in aggression requires an integrated approach, where this question is pursued by combining psychological, radiological, and genetic/genomic assessments. The translational benefits of such an approach include the discovery of novel biomarkers of aggression and targeting the MAO system to modulate pathological aggression in clinical populations.
攻击性行为普遍存在且常常具有毁灭性,需要我们共同努力,深入了解其心理社会和神经生物学基础。在后一方面,已有多种大脑区域、神经网络、神经递质、激素和候选基因与人类和动物的反社会和攻击行为有关。本综述重点关注单胺氧化酶(MAO)及其编码基因在调节攻击性方面的作用。在过去的 20 年中,大量使用药理学和遗传学方法的研究将 MAO 系统与健康和临床人群中的攻击和冲动行为联系起来,包括最近发现的 MAALIN,一种调节人类大脑中 MAO-A 基因的长非编码 RNA(lncRNA)。在这里,我们首先概述 MAO 及其生理功能,然后总结最近将 MAO 相关酶和基因活性与攻击行为联系起来的关键发现,最后为这种关联的潜在机制提供新的见解。我们以现有的实验证据为基础,讨论这些发现对临床实践的转化意义,并强调我们认为该领域存在的突出概念和方法问题。最终,我们提出,要阐明 MAO 在攻击中的具体作用,需要采用综合方法,将心理、放射学和遗传/基因组评估相结合来研究这个问题。这种方法的转化效益包括发现攻击行为的新型生物标志物,并靶向 MAO 系统以调节临床人群中的病理性攻击行为。