1 6626 102 UNDERSTANDING RESILIENCE. RESILIENCE IS THE ABILITY TO ADAPT SUCCESSFULLY IN THE FACE OF STRESS AND ADVERSITY. STRESSFUL LIFE EVENTS, TRAUMA, AND CHRONIC ADVERSITY CAN HAVE A SUBSTANTIAL IMPACT ON BRAIN FUNCTION AND STRUCTURE, AND CAN RESULT IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER (PTSD), DEPRESSION AND OTHER PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS. HOWEVER, MOST INDIVIDUALS DO NOT DEVELOP SUCH ILLNESSES AFTER EXPERIENCING STRESSFUL LIFE EVENTS, AND ARE THUS THOUGHT TO BE RESILIENT. RESILIENCE AS SUCCESSFUL ADAPTATION RELIES ON EFFECTIVE RESPONSES TO ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES AND ULTIMATE RESISTANCE TO THE DELETERIOUS EFFECTS OF STRESS, THEREFORE A GREATER UNDERSTANDING OF THE FACTORS THAT PROMOTE SUCH EFFECTS IS OF GREAT RELEVANCE. THIS REVIEW FOCUSES ON RECENT FINDINGS REGARDING GENETIC, EPIGENETIC, DEVELOPMENTAL, PSYCHOSOCIAL, AND NEUROCHEMICAL FACTORS THAT ARE CONSIDERED ESSENTIAL CONTRIBUTORS TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF RESILIENCE. NEURAL CIRCUITS AND PATHWAYS INVOLVED IN MEDIATING RESILIENCE ARE ALSO DISCUSSED. THE GROWING UNDERSTANDING OF RESILIENCE FACTORS WILL HOPEFULLY LEAD TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF NEW PHARMACOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL INTERVENTIONS FOR ENHANCING RESILIENCE AND MITIGATING THE UNTOWARD CONSEQUENCES. 2013 2 6627 60 UNDERSTANDING RESILIENCE: NEW APPROACHES FOR PREVENTING AND TREATING PTSD. ALL INDIVIDUALS EXPERIENCE STRESSFUL LIFE EVENTS, AND UP TO 84% OF THE GENERAL POPULATION WILL EXPERIENCE AT LEAST ONE POTENTIALLY TRAUMATIC EVENT. IN SOME CASES, ACUTE OR CHRONIC STRESSORS LEAD TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER (PTSD) OR OTHER PSYCHOPATHOLOGY; HOWEVER, THE MAJORITY OF PEOPLE ARE RESILIENT TO SUCH EFFECTS. RESILIENCE IS THE ABILITY TO ADAPT SUCCESSFULLY IN THE FACE OF STRESS AND ADVERSITY. A WEALTH OF RESEARCH HAS BEGUN TO IDENTIFY THE GENETIC, EPIGENETIC, NEURAL, AND ENVIRONMENTAL UNDERPINNINGS OF RESILIENCE, AND HAS INDICATED THAT RESILIENCE IS MEDIATED BY ADAPTIVE CHANGES ENCOMPASSING SEVERAL ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS, NEURAL CIRCUITS, NUMEROUS NEUROTRANSMITTERS, AND MOLECULAR PATHWAYS. THE FIRST PART OF THIS REVIEW FOCUSES ON RECENT FINDINGS REGARDING THE GENETIC, EPIGENETIC, DEVELOPMENTAL, PSYCHOSOCIAL, AND NEUROCHEMICAL FACTORS AS WELL AS NEURAL CIRCUITS AND MOLECULAR PATHWAYS THAT UNDERLIE THE DEVELOPMENT OF RESILIENCE. EMERGING AND EXCITING AREAS OF RESEARCH AND NOVEL METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES, INCLUDING GENOME-WIDE GENE EXPRESSION STUDIES, IMMUNE, ENDOCANNABINOID, OXYTOCIN, AND GLUTAMATERGIC SYSTEMS, ARE EXPLORED TO HELP DELINEATE INNOVATIVE MECHANISMS THAT MAY CONTRIBUTE TO RESILIENCE. THE SECOND PART REVIEWS SEVERAL INTERVENTIONS AND PREVENTATIVE APPROACHES DESIGNED TO ENHANCE RESILIENCE IN BOTH DEVELOPMENTAL AND ADULT POPULATIONS. SPECIFICALLY, THE REVIEW WILL DELINEATE APPROACHES AIMED TO BOLSTER RESILIENCE IN INDIVIDUALS WITH PTSD. FURTHERMORE, WE DISCUSS NOVEL PHARMACOLOGIC APPROACHES, INCLUDING THE N-METHYL-D-ASPARTATE (NMDA) RECEPTOR KETAMINE AND NEUROPEPTIDE Y (NPY), AS EXCITING NEW PROSPECTS FOR NOT ONLY THE TREATMENT OF PTSD BUT AS NEW TARGETS TO ENHANCE RESILIENCE. OUR GROWING UNDERSTANDING OF RESILIENCE AND INTERVENTIONS WILL HOPEFULLY LEAD TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF NEW STRATEGIES FOR NOT JUST TREATING PTSD BUT ALSO SCREENING AND EARLY IDENTIFICATION OF AT-RISK YOUTH AND ADULTS. TAKEN TOGETHER, EFFORTS AIMED AT DISSEMINATION AND IMPLEMENTATION OF NOVEL INTERVENTIONS TO ENHANCE RESILIENCE WILL HAVE TO KEEP PACE WITH THE GROWTH OF NEW PREVENTIVE AND TREATMENT STRATEGIES. 2016 3 5310 33 PSYCHOBIOLOGY AND MOLECULAR GENETICS OF RESILIENCE. EVERY INDIVIDUAL EXPERIENCES STRESSFUL LIFE EVENTS. IN SOME CASES ACUTE OR CHRONIC STRESS LEADS TO DEPRESSION AND OTHER PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS, BUT MOST PEOPLE ARE RESILIENT TO SUCH EFFECTS. RECENT RESEARCH HAS BEGUN TO IDENTIFY THE ENVIRONMENTAL, GENETIC, EPIGENETIC AND NEURAL MECHANISMS THAT UNDERLIE RESILIENCE, AND HAS SHOWN THAT RESILIENCE IS MEDIATED BY ADAPTIVE CHANGES IN SEVERAL NEURAL CIRCUITS INVOLVING NUMEROUS NEUROTRANSMITTER AND MOLECULAR PATHWAYS. THESE CHANGES SHAPE THE FUNCTIONING OF THE NEURAL CIRCUITS THAT REGULATE REWARD, FEAR, EMOTION REACTIVITY AND SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR, WHICH TOGETHER ARE THOUGHT TO MEDIATE SUCCESSFUL COPING WITH STRESS. 2009 4 248 41 ADVANCE IN STRESS FOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER. STRESS IS AN ADAPTIVE RESPONSE TO ENVIRONMENT AVERSIVE STIMULI AND A COMMON LIFE EXPERIENCE OF ONE'S DAILY LIFE. CHRONIC OR EXCESSIVE STRESS ESPECIALLY THAT HAPPENED IN EARLY LIFE IS FOUND TO BE DELETERIOUS TO INDIVIDUAL'S PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH, WHICH IS HIGHLY RELATED TO DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS ONSET. STRESSFUL LIFE EVENTS ARE CONSISTENTLY CONSIDERED TO BE THE HIGH-RISK FACTORS OF ENVIRONMENT FOR PREDISPOSING DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS. IN LINKING STRESSFUL LIFE EVENTS WITH DEPRESSIVE DISORDER ONSET, DYSREGULATED HPA AXIS ACTIVITY IS SUPPOSED TO PLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN MEDIATING AVERSIVE IMPACTS OF LIFE STRESS ON BRAIN STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION. INCREASING EVIDENCE HAVE INDICATED THE STRONG ASSOCIATION OF STRESS, ESPECIALLY THE CHRONIC STRESS AND EARLY LIFE STRESS, WITH DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS DEVELOPMENT, WHILE THE ASSOCIATION OF STRESS WITH DEPRESSION IS MODERATED BY GENETIC RISK FACTORS, INCLUDING POLYMORPHISM OF SERT, BDNF, GR, FKBP5, MR, AND CRHR1. MEANWHILE, STRESSFUL LIFE EXPERIENCE PARTICULARLY EARLY LIFE STRESS WILL EXERT EPIGENETIC MODIFICATION IN THESE RISK GENES VIA DNA METHYLATION AND MIRNA REGULATION TO GENERATE LONG-LASTING EFFECTS ON THESE GENES EXPRESSION, WHICH IN TURN CAUSE BRAIN STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL ALTERATION, AND FINALLY INCREASE THE VULNERABILITY TO DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS. THEREFORE, THE INTERACTION OF ENVIRONMENT WITH GENE, IN WHICH STRESSFUL LIFE EXPOSURE INTERPLAY WITH GENETIC RISK FACTORS AND EPIGENETIC MODIFICATION, IS ESSENTIAL IN PREDICTING DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS DEVELOPMENT. AS THE MEDIATOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL RISK FACTORS, STRESS WILL FUNCTION TOGETHER WITH GENETIC AND EPIGENETIC MECHANISM TO INFLUENCE BRAIN STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION, PHYSIOLOGY AND PSYCHOLOGY, AND FINALLY THE VULNERABILITY TO DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS. 2019 5 4622 25 NEUROBIOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE CONTEXT OF CHILDHOOD TRAUMA. NEUROBIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS MAY BE PARTICULARLY SUSCEPTIBLE TO DELETERIOUS IMPACT OF CHILDHOOD TRAUMA, AND THE IMPACT OF CHILDHOOD TRAUMA ON DEVELOPMENT AND SUBSEQUENT FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES ACROSS THE LIFESPAN HAS BEEN WELL-DOCUMENTED. THE CURRENT REVIEW ADDRESSES THE NEUROBIOLOGICAL IMPACT OF EXPOSURE TO INTERPERSONAL TRAUMA IN CHILDHOOD IN THE CONTEXT OF EXECUTIVE FUNCTION, EMOTION REGULATION, AND DISSOCIATION/INTEROCEPTIVE AWARENESS. SUBSEQUENT RISK FOR PTSD AND DEPRESSION IS ALSO DISCUSSED. THE PATHWAY OF RISK FROM CHILDHOOD TRAUMA TO THESE COGNITIVE, EMOTIONAL, AND PSYCHIATRIC OUTCOMES IS ADDRESSED IN TERMS OF POTENTIAL STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL ALTERATIONS WITHIN THE HIPPOCAMPUS, PREFRONTAL CORTEX, AND AMYGDALA RESULTING FROM CHRONIC OR REPEATED ACTIVATION OF THE HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-ADRENAL (HPA) AXIS AND ITS INTERACTION WITH AND INFLUENCE ON GENETIC AND EPIGENETIC PROCESSES DURING SENSITIVE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE ARE DISCUSSED. 2017 6 5829 25 STRESS, PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS, MOLECULAR TARGETS, AND MORE. MENTAL HEALTH IS CENTRAL TO NORMAL HEALTH OUTCOMES. A WIDELY ACCEPTED THEORY IS THAT CHRONIC PERSISTENT STRESS DURING ADULTHOOD AS WELL AS DURING EARLY LIFE TRIGGERS ONSET OF NEUROPSYCHIATRIC AILMENTS. HOWEVER, QUESTIONS RELATED TO HOW THAT OCCURS, AND WHY ARE SOME INDIVIDUALS RESISTANT TO STRESS WHILE OTHERS ARE NOT, REMAIN UNANSWERED. AN INTEGRATED, MULTISYSTEMIC STRESS RESPONSE INVOLVING NEUROINFLAMMATORY, NEUROENDOCRINE, EPIGENETIC AND METABOLIC CASCADES HAVE BEEN SUGGESTED TO HAVE CAUSATIVE LINKS. SEVERAL THEORIES HAVE BEEN PROPOSED OVER THE YEARS TO CONCEPTUALIZE THIS LINK INCLUDING THE CYTOKINE HYPOTHESIS, THE ENDOCRINE HYPOTHESIS, THE OXIDATIVE STRESS HYPOTHESIS AND THE OXIDO-NEUROINFLAMMATION HYPOTHESIS. THE DATA DISCUSSED IN THIS REVIEW DESCRIBES POTENTIAL BIOCHEMICAL BASIS OF THE LINK BETWEEN STRESS, AND STRESS-INDUCED NEURONAL, BEHAVIORAL AND EMOTIONAL DEFICITS, PROVIDING INSIGHTS INTO POTENTIALLY NOVEL DRUG TARGETS. 2019 7 5316 29 PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS IN EARLY LIFE AS A PREDISPOSING FACTOR FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF CHRONIC PAIN: CLINICAL AND PRECLINICAL EVIDENCE AND NEUROBIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS. A WEALTH OF RESEARCH OVER THE PAST 2 DECADES HAS EXPANDED OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE IMPACT OF EARLY-LIFE ADVERSITY ON PHYSIOLOGICAL FUNCTION AND, CONSEQUENTLY, HEALTH AND WELLBEING IN LATER LIFE. EARLY-LIFE ADVERSITY INCREASES THE RISK OF DEVELOPING A NUMBER OF DISORDERS, SUCH AS CHRONIC PAIN, FIBROMYALGIA, AND IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME. ALTHOUGH MUCH OF THE RESEARCH HAS EXAMINED THE IMPACT OF PHYSICAL MALTREATMENT, AN INCREASING NUMBER OF STUDIES HAVE BEEN PUBLISHED OVER THE PAST FEW YEARS EXAMINING THE EFFECT OF CHILDHOOD PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS AND TRAUMA ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF VARIOUS TYPES OF CHRONIC PAIN CONDITIONS. WE REVIEW THE CLINICAL AND PRECLINICAL DATA EXAMINING THE LINK AMONG EARLY-LIFE PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS, ALTERED NOCICEPTIVE BEHAVIOR, AND CHRONIC PAIN IN LATER LIFE. EVIDENCE SUPPORTING A ROLE FOR CERTAIN KEY NEUROBIOLOGICAL SUBSTRATES, INCLUDING THE HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-ADRENAL AXIS; MONOAMINERGIC, OPIOIDERGIC, ENDOCANNABINOID AND IMMUNE SYSTEMS; AND EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS IN THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN EARLY-LIFE PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS AND CHRONIC PAIN, IS PROVIDED. GREATER UNDERSTANDING OF THE IMPACT OF EARLY-LIFE STRESS MAY INFORM THE DEVELOPMENT OF PERSONALIZED TREATMENTS FOR CHRONIC PAIN IN LATER LIFE AND STRATEGIES TO PREVENT ITS ONSET IN SUSCEPTIBLE INDIVIDUALS. (C) 2016 WILEY PERIODICALS, INC. 2017 8 682 41 BRAIN ON STRESS: HOW THE SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT GETS UNDER THE SKIN. STRESS IS A STATE OF THE MIND, INVOLVING BOTH BRAIN AND BODY AS WELL AS THEIR INTERACTIONS; IT DIFFERS AMONG INDIVIDUALS AND REFLECTS NOT ONLY MAJOR LIFE EVENTS BUT ALSO THE CONFLICTS AND PRESSURES OF DAILY LIFE THAT ALTER PHYSIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS TO PRODUCE A CHRONIC STRESS BURDEN THAT, IN TURN, IS A FACTOR IN THE EXPRESSION OF DISEASE. THIS BURDEN REFLECTS THE IMPACT OF NOT ONLY LIFE EXPERIENCES BUT ALSO GENETIC VARIATIONS AND INDIVIDUAL HEALTH BEHAVIORS SUCH AS DIET, PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, SLEEP, AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE; IT ALSO REFLECTS STABLE EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS IN DEVELOPMENT THAT SET LIFELONG PATTERNS OF PHYSIOLOGICAL REACTIVITY AND BEHAVIOR THROUGH BIOLOGICAL EMBEDDING OF EARLY ENVIRONMENTS INTERACTING WITH CUMULATIVE CHANGE FROM EXPERIENCES OVER THE LIFESPAN. HORMONES ASSOCIATED WITH THE CHRONIC STRESS BURDEN PROTECT THE BODY IN THE SHORT RUN AND PROMOTE ADAPTATION (ALLOSTASIS), BUT IN THE LONG RUN, THE BURDEN OF CHRONIC STRESS CAUSES CHANGES IN THE BRAIN AND BODY THAT CAN LEAD TO DISEASE (ALLOSTATIC LOAD AND OVERLOAD). BRAIN CIRCUITS ARE PLASTIC AND REMODELED BY STRESS TO CHANGE THE BALANCE BETWEEN ANXIETY, MOOD CONTROL, MEMORY, AND DECISION MAKING. SUCH CHANGES MAY HAVE ADAPTIVE VALUE IN PARTICULAR CONTEXTS, BUT THEIR PERSISTENCE AND LACK OF REVERSIBILITY CAN BE MALADAPTIVE. HOWEVER, THE CAPACITY OF BRAIN PLASTICITY TO EFFECTS OF STRESSFUL EXPERIENCES IN ADULT LIFE HAS ONLY BEGUN TO BE EXPLORED ALONG WITH THE EFFICACY OF TOP-DOWN STRATEGIES FOR HELPING THE BRAIN CHANGE ITSELF, SOMETIMES AIDED BY PHARMACEUTICAL AGENTS AND OTHER TREATMENTS. 2012 9 2386 28 EPIGENETIC REGULATORY MECHANISMS IN STRESS-INDUCED BEHAVIOR. STRESS RESPONSE IS CONSIDERED TO HAVE ADAPTIVE VALUE FOR ORGANISMS FACED WITH STRESSFUL CONDITION. CHRONIC STRESS HOWEVER ADVERSELY AFFECTS THE PHYSIOLOGY AND MAY LEAD TO NEUROPSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS. REPEATED STRESSFUL EVENTS IN ANIMAL MODELS HAVE BEEN SHOWN TO CAUSE LONG-LASTING CHANGES IN NEURAL CIRCUITRIES AT MOLECULAR, CELLULAR, AND PHYSIOLOGICAL LEVEL, LEADING TO DISORDERS OF MOOD AS WELL AS COGNITION. MOLECULAR STUDIES IN RECENT YEARS HAVE IMPLICATED DIVERSE EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS, INCLUDING HISTONE MODIFICATIONS, DNA METHYLATION, AND NONCODING RNAS, THAT UNDERLIE DYSREGULATION OF GENES IN THE AFFECTED NEURAL CIRCUITRIES IN CHRONIC STRESS-INDUCED PATHOPHYSIOLOGY. A REVIEW OF THE MYRIAD EPIGENETIC REGULATORY MECHANISMS ASSOCIATED WITH NEURAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES IN ANIMAL MODELS OF STRESS-INDUCED NEUROPSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS IS PRESENTED HERE. THE REVIEW ALSO DEALS WITH CLINICAL EVIDENCE OF THE EPIGENETIC DYSREGULATION OF GENES IN PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS WHERE CHRONIC STRESS APPEARS TO UNDERLIE THE ETIOPATHOLOGY. 2014 10 2269 39 EPIGENETIC PROGRAMMING OF THE NEUROENDOCRINE STRESS RESPONSE BY ADULT LIFE STRESS. THE HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-ADRENAL (HPA) AXIS IS CRITICALLY INVOLVED IN THE NEUROENDOCRINE REGULATION OF STRESS ADAPTATION, AND THE RESTORATION OF HOMEOSTASIS FOLLOWING STRESS EXPOSURE. DYSREGULATION OF THIS AXIS IS ASSOCIATED WITH STRESS-RELATED PATHOLOGIES LIKE MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER, POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER, PANIC DISORDER AND CHRONIC ANXIETY. IT HAS LONG BEEN UNDERSTOOD THAT STRESS DURING EARLY LIFE CAN HAVE A SIGNIFICANT LASTING INFLUENCE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEUROENDOCRINE SYSTEM AND ITS NEURAL REGULATORS, PARTIALLY BY MODIFYING EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION, WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH AND WELL-BEING IN LATER LIFE. EVIDENCE IS ACCUMULATING THAT EPIGENETIC PLASTICITY ALSO EXTENDS TO ADULTHOOD, PROPOSING IT AS A MECHANISM BY WHICH PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA LATER IN LIFE CAN LONG-LASTINGLY AFFECT HPA AXIS FUNCTION, BRAIN PLASTICITY, NEURONAL FUNCTION AND BEHAVIOURAL ADAPTATION TO NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS. FURTHER CORROBORATING THIS CLAIM IS THE PHENOMENON THAT THESE EPIGENETIC CHANGES CORRELATE WITH THE BEHAVIOURAL CONSEQUENCES OF TRAUMA EXPOSURE. THEREBY, EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS PROVIDE A PUTATIVE MOLECULAR MECHANISM BY WHICH THE BEHAVIOURAL PHENOTYPE AND TRANSCRIPTIONAL/TRANSLATIONAL POTENTIAL OF GENES INVOLVED IN HPA AXIS REGULATION CAN CHANGE DRASTICALLY IN RESPONSE TO ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES, AND APPEAR AN IMPORTANT TARGET FOR TREATMENT OF STRESS-RELATED DISORDERS. HOWEVER, IMPROVED INSIGHT IS REQUIRED TO INCREASE THEIR THERAPEUTIC (DRUG) POTENTIAL. HERE, WE PROVIDE AN OVERVIEW OF THE GROWING BODY OF LITERATURE DESCRIBING THE EPIGENETIC MODULATION OF THE (PRIMARILY NEUROENDOCRINE) STRESS RESPONSE AS A CONSEQUENCE OF ADULT LIFE STRESS AND INTERPRET THE IMPLICATIONS FOR, AND THE CHALLENGES INVOLVED IN APPLYING THIS KNOWLEDGE TO, THE IDENTIFICATION AND TREATMENT OF STRESS-RELATED PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS. 2017 11 5164 36 PRECLINICAL AND CLINICAL EVIDENCE OF DNA METHYLATION CHANGES IN RESPONSE TO TRAUMA AND CHRONIC STRESS. EXPOSURE TO CHRONIC STRESS, EITHER REPEATED SEVERE ACUTE OR MODERATE SUSTAINED STRESS, IS ONE OF THE STRONGEST RISK FACTORS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF PSYCHOPATHOLOGIES SUCH AS POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER AND DEPRESSION. CHRONIC STRESS IS LINKED WITH SEVERAL LASTING BIOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES, PARTICULARLY TO THE STRESS ENDOCRINE SYSTEM BUT ALSO AFFECTING INTERMEDIATE PHENOTYPES SUCH AS BRAIN STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION, IMMUNE FUNCTION, AND BEHAVIOR. ALTHOUGH GENETIC PREDISPOSITION CONFERS A PROPORTION OF THE RISK, THE MOST RELEVANT MOLECULAR MECHANISMS DETERMINING THOSE SUSCEPTIBLE AND RESILIENT TO THE EFFECTS OF STRESS AND TRAUMA MAY BE EPIGENETIC. EPIGENETICS REFERS TO THE MECHANISMS THAT REGULATE GENOMIC INFORMATION BY DYNAMICALLY CHANGING THE PATTERNS OF TRANSCRIPTION AND TRANSLATION OF GENES. MOUNTING EVIDENCE FROM PRECLINICAL RODENT AND CLINICAL POPULATION STUDIES STRONGLY SUPPORT THAT EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS CAN OCCUR IN RESPONSE TO TRAUMATIC AND CHRONIC STRESS. HERE, WE DISCUSS THIS LITERATURE EXAMINING STRESS-INDUCED EPIGENETIC CHANGES IN PRECLINICAL MODELS AND CLINICAL COHORTS OF STRESS AND TRAUMA OCCURRING EARLY IN LIFE OR IN ADULTHOOD. WE HIGHLIGHT THAT A COMPLEX RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE TIMING OF ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS AND GENETIC PREDISPOSITIONS LIKELY MEDIATE THE RESPONSE TO CHRONIC STRESS OVER TIME, AND THAT A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF EPIGENETIC CHANGES IS NEEDED BY FURTHER INVESTIGATIONS IN LONGITUDINAL AND POSTMORTEM BRAIN CLINICAL COHORTS. 2017 12 4914 27 PAIN VULNERABILITY: A NEUROBIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE. THERE ARE MANY KNOWN RISK FACTORS FOR CHRONIC PAIN CONDITIONS, YET THE BIOLOGICAL UNDERPINNINGS THAT LINK THESE FACTORS TO ABNORMAL PROCESSING OF PAINFUL SIGNALS ARE ONLY JUST BEGINNING TO BE EXPLORED. THIS REVIEW WILL DISCUSS THE POTENTIAL MECHANISMS THAT HAVE BEEN PROPOSED TO UNDERLIE VULNERABILITY AND RESILIENCE TOWARD DEVELOPING CHRONIC PAIN. PARTICULAR FOCUS WILL BE GIVEN TO GENETIC AND EPIGENETIC PROCESSES, PRIMING EFFECTS ON A CELLULAR LEVEL, AND ALTERATIONS IN BRAIN NETWORKS CONCERNED WITH REWARD, MOTIVATION/LEARNING AND DESCENDING MODULATORY CONTROL. ALTHOUGH RESEARCH IN THIS AREA IS STILL IN ITS INFANCY, A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF HOW PAIN VULNERABILITY EMERGES HAS THE POTENTIAL TO HELP IDENTIFY INDIVIDUALS AT RISK AND MAY OPEN UP NEW THERAPEUTIC AVENUES. 2014 13 6119 24 THE EPIGENETIC IMPACTS OF SOCIAL STRESS: HOW DOES SOCIAL ADVERSITY BECOME BIOLOGICALLY EMBEDDED? EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS ARE IMPLICATED IN THE PROCESSES THROUGH WHICH SOCIAL STRESSORS ERODE HEALTH IN HUMANS AND OTHER ANIMALS. HERE I REVIEW PROGRESS IN ELUCIDATING THE BIOLOGICAL PATHWAYS UNDERLYING THE SOCIAL GRADIENT IN HEALTH, WITH PARTICULAR EMPHASIS ON HOW BEHAVIORAL STRESSES INFLUENCE EPIGENOMIC VARIATION LINKED TO HEALTH. THE EVIDENCE THAT EPIGENETIC CHANGES ARE INVOLVED IN EMBEDDING OF SOCIAL STATUS-LINKED CHRONIC STRESS IS REVIEWED IN THE CONTEXT OF CURRENT KNOWLEDGE ABOUT BEHAVIOR WITHIN ANIMAL DOMINANCE HIERARCHIES AND THE IMPACTS OF SOCIAL POSITION ON BEHAVIORS THAT AFFECT HEALTH. THE ROLES OF EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS IN RESPONSES TO TRAUMA AND THE EVIDENCE FOR THEIR INVOLVEMENT IN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION OF THE BIOLOGICAL IMPACTS OF TRAUMATIC STRESS ARE ALSO CONSIDERED. TAKEN TOGETHER, THE EMERGING INSIGHTS HAVE IMPORTANT IMPLICATIONS FOR DEVELOPMENT OF STRATEGIES TO IMPROVE SOCIETAL HEALTH AND WELL-BEING. 2016 14 6228 29 THE LINKS BETWEEN STRESS AND DEPRESSION: PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGICAL, GENETIC, AND ENVIRONMENTAL INTERACTIONS. THE ROLE OF STRESS IN THE ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF DEPRESSION MAY BE CONCEIVED AS THE RESULT OF MULTIPLE CONVERGING FACTORS, INCLUDING THE CHRONIC EFFECT OF ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS AND THE LONG-LASTING EFFECTS OF STRESSFUL EXPERIENCES DURING CHILDHOOD, ALL OF WHICH MAY INDUCE PERSISTENT HYPERACTIVITY OF THE HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-ADRENAL AXIS. THESE CHANGES, INCLUDING INCREASED AVAILABILITY OF CORTICOTROPIN-RELEASING FACTOR AND CORTISOL, ARE ALSO ASSOCIATED WITH HYPERACTIVITY OF THE AMYGDALA, HYPOACTIVITY OF THE HIPPOCAMPUS, AND DECREASED SEROTONERGIC NEUROTRANSMISSION, WHICH TOGETHER RESULT IN INCREASED VULNERABILITY TO STRESS. THE ROLE OF OTHER MONOAMINERGIC NEUROTRANSMITTERS, GENETIC POLYMORPHISMS, EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS, INFLAMMATORY PROCESSES, AND ALTERED COGNITIVE PROCESSING HAS ALSO BEEN CONSIDERED IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A COMPREHENSIVE MODEL OF THE INTERACTIONS BETWEEN DIFFERENT FACTORS OF VULNERABILITY. FURTHER UNDERSTANDING OF THE UNDERLYING MECHANISMS THAT LINK THESE FACTORS MAY CONTRIBUTE SIGNIFICANTLY TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF MORE EFFECTIVE TREATMENTS AND PREVENTIVE STRATEGIES IN THE INTERFACE BETWEEN STRESS AND MOOD DISORDERS. 2016 15 2415 30 EPIGENETIC SIGNALING IN PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS: STRESS AND DEPRESSION. PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS ARE COMPLEX MULTIFACTORIAL DISORDERS INVOLVING CHRONIC ALTERATIONS IN NEURAL CIRCUIT STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION. WHILE GENETIC FACTORS PLAY A ROLE IN THE ETIOLOGY OF DISORDERS SUCH AS DEPRESSION, ADDICTION, AND SCHIZOPHRENIA, RELATIVELY HIGH RATES OF DISCORDANCE AMONG IDENTICAL TWINS CLEARLY POINT TO THE IMPORTANCE OF ADDITIONAL FACTORS. ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS, SUCH AS STRESS, PLAY A MAJOR ROLE IN THE PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS BY INDUCING STABLE CHANGES IN GENE EXPRESSION, NEURAL CIRCUIT FUNCTION, AND ULTIMATELY BEHAVIOR. INSULTS AT THE DEVELOPMENTAL STAGE AND IN ADULTHOOD APPEAR TO INDUCE DISTINCT MALADAPTATIONS. INCREASING EVIDENCE INDICATES THAT THESE SUSTAINED ABNORMALITIES ARE MAINTAINED BY EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS IN SPECIFIC BRAIN REGIONS. INDEED, TRANSCRIPTIONAL DYSREGULATION AND ASSOCIATED ABERRANT EPIGENETIC REGULATION IS A UNIFYING THEME IN PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS. ASPECTS OF DEPRESSION CAN BE MODELED IN ANIMALS BY INDUCING DISEASE-LIKE STATES THROUGH ENVIRONMENTAL MANIPULATIONS, AND THESE STUDIES CAN PROVIDE A MORE GENERAL UNDERSTANDING OF EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS IN PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS. UNDERSTANDING HOW ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS RECRUIT THE EPIGENETIC MACHINERY IN ANIMAL MODELS IS PROVIDING NEW INSIGHTS INTO DISEASE MECHANISMS IN HUMANS. 2014 16 4591 30 NARRATIVE REVIEW OF THE COMPLEX INTERACTION BETWEEN PAIN AND TRAUMA IN CHILDREN: A FOCUS ON BIOLOGICAL MEMORY, PRECLINICAL DATA, AND EPIGENETIC PROCESSES. THE INCIDENCE AND COLLECTIVE IMPACT OF EARLY ADVERSE EXPERIENCES, TRAUMA, AND PAIN CONTINUE TO INCREASE. THIS UNDERSCORES THE URGENT NEED FOR TRANSLATIONAL EFFORTS BETWEEN CLINICAL AND PRECLINICAL RESEARCH TO BETTER UNDERSTAND THE UNDERLYING MECHANISMS AND DEVELOP EFFECTIVE THERAPEUTIC APPROACHES. AS OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THESE ISSUES IMPROVES FROM STUDIES IN CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS, WE CAN CREATE MORE PRECISE PRECLINICAL MODELS AND ULTIMATELY TRANSLATE OUR FINDINGS BACK TO CLINICAL PRACTICE. A MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACH IS ESSENTIAL FOR ADDRESSING THE COMPLEX AND WIDE-RANGING EFFECTS OF THESE EXPERIENCES ON INDIVIDUALS AND SOCIETY. THIS NARRATIVE REVIEW AIMS TO (1) DEFINE PAIN AND TRAUMA EXPERIENCES IN CHILDHOOD AND ADOLESCENTS, (2) DISCUSS THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PAIN AND TRAUMA, (3) CONSIDER THE ROLE OF BIOLOGICAL MEMORY, (4) DECIPHER THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PAIN AND TRAUMA USING PRECLINICAL DATA, AND (5) EXAMINE THE ROLE OF THE ENVIRONMENT BY INTRODUCING THE IMPORTANCE OF EPIGENETIC PROCESSES. THE ULTIMATE SCOPE IS TO BETTER UNDERSTAND THE WIDE-RANGING EFFECTS OF TRAUMA, ABUSE, AND CHRONIC PAIN ON CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS, HOW THEY OCCUR, AND HOW TO PREVENT OR MITIGATE THEIR EFFECTS AND DEVELOP EFFECTIVE TREATMENT STRATEGIES THAT ADDRESS BOTH THE UNDERLYING CAUSES AND THE ASSOCIATED PHYSIOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS. 2023 17 3001 36 GENETIC, EPIGENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ON SEX DIFFERENCES IN SOCIAL BEHAVIOR. THE FIELD OF BEHAVIORAL NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY HAS GENERATED THOUSANDS OF STUDIES THAT INDICATE DIFFERENCES IN BRAIN STRUCTURE AND REACTIVITY TO GONADAL STEROIDS THAT PRODUCE SEX-SPECIFIC PATTERNS OF SOCIAL BEHAVIOR. HOWEVER, RAPIDLY EMERGING EVIDENCE SHOWS THAT GENETIC POLYMORPHISMS AND RESULTING DIFFERENCES IN THE EXPRESSION OF NEUROACTIVE PEPTIDES AND RECEPTORS AS WELL AS EARLY-LIFE EXPERIENCE AND EPIGENETIC CHANGES ARE IMPORTANT MODIFIERS OF SOCIAL BEHAVIOR. FURTHERMORE, DUE TO ITS INHERENT COMPLEXITY, THE NEUROCHEMICAL MECHANISMS UNDERLYING SEX DIFFERENCES IN SOCIAL BEHAVIOR ARE USUALLY STUDIED IN A TIGHTLY REGULATED LABORATORY SETTING RATHER THAN IN COMPLEX ENVIRONMENTS. IMPORTANTLY, SPECIFIC HORMONES MAY ELICIT A RANGE OF DIFFERENT BEHAVIORS DEPENDING ON THE CUES PRESENT IN THESE ENVIRONMENTS. FOR EXAMPLE, INDIVIDUALS EXPOSED TO A PSYCHOSOCIAL STRESSOR MAY RESPOND DIFFERENTLY TO THE EFFECTS OF A GONADAL STEROID THAN THOSE NOT EXPOSED TO CHRONIC STRESS. THE OBJECTIVE OF THIS REVIEW IS NOT TO RE-EXAMINE THE ACTIVATIONAL EFFECTS OF HORMONES ON SEX DIFFERENCES IN SOCIAL BEHAVIOR BUT RATHER TO CONSIDER HOW GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS MODIFY THE EFFECTS OF HORMONES ON BEHAVIOR. WE WILL FOCUS ON ESTROGEN AND ITS RECEPTORS BUT CONSIDERATION IS ALSO GIVEN TO THE ROLE OF ANDROGENS. FURTHERMORE, WE HAVE LIMITED OUR DISCUSSIONS TO THE IMPORTANCE OF OXYTOCIN AND VASOPRESSIN AS TARGETS OF GONADAL STEROIDS AND HOW THESE EFFECTS ARE MODIFIED BY GENETIC AND EXPERIENTIAL SITUATIONS. TAKEN TOGETHER, THE DATA CLEARLY UNDERSCORE THE NEED TO EXPAND RESEARCH INITIATIVES TO CONSIDER GENE-ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS FOR BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF SEX DIFFERENCES IN SOCIAL BEHAVIOR. 2009 18 802 34 CENTRAL AND PERIPHERAL STRESS-INDUCED EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS OF RESILIENCE. PURPOSE OF REVIEW: RESILIENCE IS AN ADAPTATION PROCESS PRESENTED BY AN INDIVIDUAL DESPITE FACING ADVERSITIES. EPIGENETIC CHANGES, SUCH AS HISTONE ACETYLATION/METHYLATION AND DNA METHYLATION, HAVE BEEN DEMONSTRATED TO MEDIATE STRESS RESPONSE. IN THIS REVIEW, WE SUMMARIZE RECENT FINDINGS ON EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS CONTRIBUTING TO STRESS RESILIENCE. RECENT FINDINGS: EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS OF GENES INVOLVED IN SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY, ENDOCRINE, IMMUNE, AND VASCULAR SYSTEMS ARE LINKED TO RESILIENCE. FOR INSTANCE, INCREASED DNA METHYLATION OF THE NONNEURONAL GROWTH FACTOR GDNF IN SPECIFIC BRAIN REGIONS PROMOTES STRESS RESILIENCE. ADDITIONALLY, HIGH DNA METHYLATION AT THE GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTOR GENE WAS ASSOCIATED WITH RESILIENCE IN BOTH RODENTS AND HUMANS. AT THE IMMUNE LEVEL, CHRONIC STRESS INDUCES INCREASED DNA METHYLATION AT IL6 GENE, A MEDIATOR OF STRESS VULNERABILITY. MOREOVER, EPIGENETIC ADAPTATIONS OF THE BLOOD--BRAIN BARRIER HAVE BEEN RECENTLY ASSOCIATED WITH STRESS RESILIENCE, WHICH COULD LEAD TO INNOVATIVE THERAPEUTIC APPROACHES TO TREAT DEPRESSION. SUMMARY: IDENTIFICATION OF BOTH CENTRAL AND PERIPHERAL EPIGENETIC CHANGES PROMOTING STRESS RESILIENCE REPRESENT PROMISING NOVEL TARGETS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF PREVENTIVE AND PERSONALIZED MEDICINE. NEVERTHELESS, MORE RESEARCH IS NEEDED TO ESTABLISH SEX SPECIFIC DIFFERENCES AND TO IDENTIFY NOVEL EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS, SUCH AS SEROTONYLATION AND DOPAMINYLATION, THAT HOLD GREAT PROMISES FOR THE FIELD OF PSYCHIATRY. 2021 19 1750 32 EARLY LIFE STRESS AND PEDIATRIC POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER. TRAUMATIC STRESS EXPOSURE DURING CRITICAL PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT MAY HAVE ESSENTIAL AND LONG-LASTING EFFECTS ON THE PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OF INDIVIDUALS. TWO THIRDS OF YOUTH ARE EXPOSED TO POTENTIALLY TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCES BY THE AGE OF 17, AND APPROXIMATELY 5% OF ADOLESCENTS MEET LIFETIME CRITERIA FOR POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER (PTSD). THE ROLE OF THE STRESS SYSTEM IS THE MAINTENANCE OF HOMEOSTASIS IN THE PRESENCE OF REAL/PERCEIVED AND ACUTE/CHRONIC STRESSORS. EARLY-LIFE STRESS (ELS) HAS AN IMPACT ON NEURONAL BRAIN NETWORKS INVOLVED IN STRESS REACTIONS, AND COULD EXERT A PROGRAMMING EFFECT ON GLUCOCORTICOID SIGNALING. STUDIES ON PEDIATRIC PTSD REVEAL DIVERSE NEUROENDOCRINE RESPONSES TO ADVERSE EVENTS AND RELATED LONG-TERM NEUROENDOCRINE AND EPIGENETIC ALTERATIONS. NEUROENDOCRINE, NEUROIMAGING, AND GENETIC STUDIES IN CHILDREN WITH PTSD AND ELS EXPERIENCES ARE CRUCIAL IN UNDERSTANDING RISK AND RESILIENCE FACTORS, AND ALSO THE NATURAL HISTORY OF PTSD. 2020 20 1229 29 CRITICAL WINDOWS: EXPLORING THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN PERINATAL TRAUMA, EPIGENETICS, AND CHRONIC PAIN. CHRONIC PAIN IS HIGHLY PREVALENT AND BURDENSOME, AFFECTING MILLIONS OF PEOPLE WORLDWIDE. ALTHOUGH IT EMERGES AT ANY POINT IN LIFE, IT OFTEN MANIFESTS IN ADOLESCENCE. GIVEN THAT ADOLESCENCE IS A UNIQUE DEVELOPMENTAL PERIOD, ADDITIONAL STRAINS ASSOCIATED WITH PERSISTENT AND OFTEN IDIOPATHIC PAIN LEAD TO SIGNIFICANT LONG-TERM CONSEQUENCES. WHILE THERE IS NO SINGULAR CAUSE FOR THE CHRONIFICATION OF PAIN, EPIGENETIC MODIFICATIONS THAT LEAD TO NEURAL REORGANIZATION MAY UNDERPIN CENTRAL SENSITIZATION AND SUBSEQUENT MANIFESTATION OF PAIN HYPERSENSITIVITY. EPIGENETIC PROCESSES ARE PARTICULARLY ACTIVE DURING THE PRENATAL AND EARLY POSTNATAL YEARS. WE DEMONSTRATE HOW EXPOSURE TO VARIOUS TRAUMAS, SUCH AS INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE WHILE IN UTERO OR ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES, CAN SIGNIFICANTLY INFLUENCE EPIGENETIC REGULATION WITHIN THE BRAIN AND IN TURN MODIFY PAIN-RELATED PROCESSES. WE PROVIDE COMPELLING EVIDENCE THAT THE BURDEN OF CHRONIC PAIN IS LIKELY INITIATED EARLY IN LIFE, OFTEN BEING TRANSMITTED FROM MOTHER TO OFFSPRING. WE ALSO HIGHLIGHT TWO PROMISING PROPHYLACTIC STRATEGIES, OXYTOCIN ADMINISTRATION AND PROBIOTIC USE, THAT HAVE THE POTENTIAL TO ATTENUATE THE EPIGENETIC CONSEQUENCES OF EARLY ADVERSITY. OVERALL, WE ADVANCE UNDERSTANDING OF THE CAUSAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TRAUMA AND ADOLESCENT CHRONIC PAIN BY HIGHLIGHTING EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS THAT UNDERLIE THIS TRANSMISSION OF RISK, ULTIMATELY INFORMING HOW TO PREVENT THIS RISING EPIDEMIC. 2023