Kaplan J R, Manuck S B, Clarkson T B, Lusso F M, Taub D M
Arteriosclerosis. 1982 Sep-Oct;2(5):359-68. doi: 10.1161/01.atv.2.5.359.
The purpose of this experiment was to examine the effects of social environment and social status on coronary artery and aortic atherosclerosis in adult male cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis). Thirty experimental animals were assigned to six groups of five members each, and all animals were fed a moderately atherogenic diet (43% of calories as fat, 0.34 mg cholesterol/Cal) for 22 months. Group memberships were changed periodically among 15 monkeys (unstable social condition) and remained fixed throughout the experiment in the remaining animals (stable social condition). Within each condition, individual monkeys were classified as either dominant or subordinate animals, based on dyadic patterns of aggression and submission. At necropsy, the coronary arteries were subjected to pressure fixation and five sections each were taken from the left anterior descending, left circumflex, and right coronary arteries. The mean intimal area measurement, based on all arterial sections, served as a coronary index for each animal. Results indicated that dominant animals in the unstable condition had significantly greater coronary artery atherosclerosis than dominant monkeys housed in stable social groups. Coronary artery atherosclerosis in the unstable dominants was also greater than among similarly housed (i.e., unstable) subordinates. A similar pattern was observed in the abdominal aorta, but was not statistically significant. No significant differences or similar patterns were seen in the thoracic aorta. Additional analyses revealed that the coronary artery effects were not due to concomitant differences in total serum cholesterol or high density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations, blood pressures, ponderosity, or fasting glucose concentrations among the experimental animals. Behaviorally, manipulation of group memberships intensified agonistic encounters and disrupted patterns of affiliative interaction between dominant and subordinate monkeys. Overall, these results suggest that social dominance (an individual behavioral characteristic) is associated with increased coronary artery atherosclerosis, but only under social conditions that provide recurrent threats to the status of dominant animals (i.e., under behavioral challenge).
本实验的目的是研究社会环境和社会地位对成年雄性食蟹猴(猕猴属)冠状动脉和主动脉动脉粥样硬化的影响。30只实验动物被分成6组,每组5只,所有动物均喂食中度致动脉粥样化饮食(43%的热量来自脂肪,每卡路里含0.34毫克胆固醇),持续22个月。15只猴子的组内成员定期更换(不稳定社会条件),其余动物在整个实验过程中组内成员保持固定(稳定社会条件)。在每种条件下,根据攻击性和顺从性的二元模式,将个体猴子分为优势或从属动物。尸检时,冠状动脉进行压力固定,从左前降支、左旋支和右冠状动脉各取5个切片。基于所有动脉切片的平均内膜面积测量值作为每只动物的冠状动脉指数。结果表明,处于不稳定条件下的优势动物比处于稳定社会群体中的优势猴子有更严重的冠状动脉粥样硬化。不稳定优势动物的冠状动脉粥样硬化也比同样饲养(即不稳定)的从属动物更严重。在腹主动脉中观察到类似模式,但无统计学意义。在胸主动脉中未观察到显著差异或类似模式。进一步分析表明,冠状动脉的影响并非由于实验动物之间总血清胆固醇或高密度脂蛋白胆固醇浓度、血压、体重或空腹血糖浓度的伴随差异所致。行为上,组内成员的操纵加剧了争斗性遭遇,并破坏了优势和从属猴子之间的亲和互动模式。总体而言,这些结果表明,社会优势(一种个体行为特征)与冠状动脉粥样硬化增加有关,但仅在对优势动物地位构成反复威胁的社会条件下(即行为挑战下)如此。