Cortisol Stress Response in Men and Women Modulated Differentially by the Mu-Opioid Receptor Gene Polymorphism OPRM1 A118G

被引:0
作者
William R Lovallo
Mary-Anne Enoch
Ashley Acheson
Andrew J Cohoon
Kristen H Sorocco
Colin A Hodgkinson
Andrea S Vincent
David C Glahn
David Goldman
机构
[1] VA Medical Center,Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
[2] University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center,Department of Psychiatry
[3] Laboratory of Neurogenetics,Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatric Medicine
[4] NIH,Department of Psychiatry
[5] NIAAA,undefined
[6] University of Texas Health Sciences Center at San Antonio,undefined
[7] Research Imaging Institute,undefined
[8] UTHSCSA,undefined
[9] OUHSC,undefined
[10] Cognitive Science Research Center,undefined
[11] University of Oklahoma,undefined
[12] Olin Neuropsychiatry Research Center,undefined
[13] Institute of Living,undefined
[14] Hartford Hospital,undefined
[15] Yale University School of Medicine,undefined
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2015年 / 40卷
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摘要
Differences in stress reactivity may affect long-term health outcomes, but there is little information on how these differences arise. The stress axis is regulated by, in part, the endogenous opioid, beta-endorphin, acting on mu-opioid receptors. Persons carrying one or two copies of the G allele of the mu-opioid receptor gene (OPRM1 A118G) may have higher receptor binding for beta-endorphin compared with AA homozygotes that may contribute to individual differences in cortisol reactivity to stress, leading to a relative blunting of cortisol stress reactivity in G allele genotypes. We measured cortisol in 251 young adults (69 GA/GG vs 182 AA genotypes) exposed to mental arithmetic plus public speaking stress relative to a resting control day. Women had smaller cortisol responses than men (F=10.2, p=0.002), and women with GA or GG genotypes (N=39) had an absence of cortisol response relative to AA carriers (N=110) (F=18.4, p<0.0001). Male genotypes had no such difference in response (F=0.29). Cortisol response following mu-opioid receptor blockade using naltrexone in 119 of these subjects unmasked a greater tonic opioid inhibition of cortisol secretion in women (N=64), consistent with their blunted stress reactivity. Compared with men, women may have cortisol stress responses that are more heavily regulated by endogenous opioid mechanisms, and the OPRM1 GA/GG genotypes may affect females differentially relative to males. Diminished cortisol responses to stress may have consequences for health behaviors in women with GA/GG genotypes.
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页码:2546 / 2554
页数:8
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