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 An interesting article.

Nic 56/14*



Abuse in early childhood permanently alters how the brain reacts to stress,
a Canadian study suggests.*

 Analysis of brain tissue from adults who had committed suicide found key
genetic changes in those who had suffered abuse as a child.

It affects the production of a receptor known to be involved in stress
responses, the researchers said.

The Nature Neuroscience study underpins the impact of stress on early brain
development, experts said.

Previous research has shown that abuse in childhood is associated with an
increased reaction to stressful circumstances.

 But exactly how environmental factors interact with genes and contribute to
depression or other mental disorders in adulthood is not well understood.

A research team led by McGill University, in Montreal, examined the gene for
the glucocorticoid receptor - which helps control the response to stress -
in a specific brain region of 12 suicide victims with a history of child
abuse and 12 suicide victims who did not suffer abuse when younger.

They found chemical changes which reduced the activity of the gene in those
who suffered child abuse.

And they showed this reduced activity leads to fewer glucocorticoid
receptors.

Those affected would have had an abnormally heightened response to stress,
the researchers said.

*Long-term*

It suggests that experience in childhood when the brain is developing, can
have a long-term impact on how someone responds to stressful situations.

But study leader Professor Michael Meaney said they believe these
biochemical effects could also occur later in life.

"If you're a public health individual or a child psychologist you could say
this shows you nothing you didn't already know.

"But until you show the biological process, many people in government and
policy-makers are reluctant to believe it's real.

"Beyond that, you could ask whether a drug could reverse these effects and
that's a possibility."

Dr Jonathan Mill, from the Institute of Psychiatry at Kings College London
said the research added to growing evidence that environmental factors can
alter the expression of genes - a process known as epigenetics.

"Whilst these results obviously need to be replicated, they provide a
mechanism by which experiences early in life can have an effect on behaviour
later in adulthood.

"The exciting thing about epigenetic alterations is that they are
potentially reversible, and thus perhaps a future target for therapeutic
intervention."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7901337.stm

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