Authors
Gregory E Miller, Edith Chen, Alexandra K Fok, Hope Walker, Alvin Lim, Erin F Nicholls, Steve Cole, Michael S Kobor
Publication date
2009/8/25
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
106
Issue
34
Pages
14716-14721
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Children reared in unfavorable socioeconomic circumstances show increased susceptibility to the chronic diseases of aging when they reach the fifth and sixth decades of life. One mechanistic hypothesis for this phenomenon suggests that social adversity in early life programs biological systems in a manner that persists across decades and thereby accentuates vulnerability to disease. Here we examine the basic tenets of this hypothesis by performing genome-wide transcriptional profiling in healthy adults who were either low or high in socioeconomic status (SES) in early life. Among subjects with low early-life SES, there was significant up-regulation of genes bearing response elements for the CREB/ATF family of transcription factors that conveys adrenergic signals to leukocytes, and significant down-regulation of genes with response elements for the glucocorticoid receptor, which regulates the secretion of …
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