Neuroimmune mechanisms connecting violence with internalizing symptoms: A high‐dimensional multimodal mediation analysis

Author:

Butler Ellyn R.1,Samia Noelle2,White Stuart3,Gratton Caterina14,Nusslock Robin15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology Northwestern University Evanston Illinois USA

2. Department of Statistics and Data Science Northwestern University Evanston Illinois USA

3. Nebraska Children and Families Foundation Lincoln Nebraska USA

4. Department of Psychology Florida State University Tallahassee Florida USA

5. Institute for Policy Research Northwestern University Evanston Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractViolence exposure is associated with worsening anxiety and depression symptoms among adolescents. Mechanistically, social defeat stress models in mice indicate that violence increases peripherally derived macrophages in threat appraisal regions of the brain, which have been causally linked to anxious behavior. In the present study, we investigate if there is a path connecting violence exposure with internalizing symptom severity through peripheral inflammation and amygdala connectivity. Two hundred and thirty‐three adolescents, ages 12–15, from the Chicago area completed clinical assessments, immune assays and neuroimaging. A high‐dimensional multimodal mediation model was fit, using violence exposure as the predictor, 12 immune variables as the first set of mediators and 288 amygdala connectivity variables as the second set, and internalizing symptoms as the primary outcome measure. 56.2% of the sample had been exposed to violence in their lifetime. Amygdala–hippocampus connectivity mediated the association between violence exposure and internalizing symptoms (, ). There was no evidence that inflammation or inflammation and amygdala connectivity in tandem mediated the association. Considering the amygdala and the hippocampus work together to encode, consolidate, and retrieve contextual fear memories, violence exposure may be associated with greater connectivity between the amygdala and the hippocampus because it could be adaptive for the amygdala and the hippocampus to be in greater communication following violence exposure to facilitate evaluation of contextual threat cues. Therefore, chronic elevations of amygdala–hippocampal connectivity may indicate persistent vigilance that leads to internalizing symptoms.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Institute on Drug Abuse

National Science Foundation

National Institute of Mental Health

Publisher

Wiley

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