Abstract

Urbanization is increasing globally, and is associated with stress and increased mental health risks, including for depression. However, it remains unclear, especially at the level of brain function, how urbanicity, social threat stressors, and psychiatric risk may be linked. Here, we aim to define the structural and functional MRI neural correlates of social stress, childhood urbanicity, and their putative mechanistic relevance to depressive illness risk, in terms of behavioral traits and genetics. We studied a sample of healthy adults with divergent urban and rural childhoods. We examined childhood urbanicity effects on brain structure as suggested by MRI, and its functional relevance to depression risk, through interactions between urbanicity and trait anxiety-depression, as well as between urbanicity and polygenic risk for depression, during stress-related medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) engagement. Subjects with divergent rural and urban childhoods were similar in adult socioeconomic status and were genetically homogeneous. Urban childhood was associated with relatively reduced mPFC gray matter volumes as suggested by MRI. MPFC engagement under social status threat correlated with the higher trait anxiety-depression in subjects with urban childhoods, but not in their rural counterparts, implicating an exaggerated physiological response to the threat context with urbanicity, in association with behavioral risk for depression. Stress-associated mPFC engagement also interacted with polygenic risk for depression, significantly predicting a differential mPFC response in individuals with urban but not rural childhoods. Developmental urbanicity, therefore, appears to interact with genetic and behavioral risk for depression on the mPFC neural response to a threat context.

Highlights

  • The world has been rapidly urbanizing, and in recent years especially so in Asia, bringing significant economic, social and environmental changes to traditional agrarian societies

  • Another feature of our study population is the relative homogeneity in current socio-economic status and genetic ancestry, which presents an opportunity to address questions about the childhood environment with better in the structural MRI study. These functional ROIs were defined independently of subsequent dependent variables of interest. In these ROIs, we examined the hypotheses that depression risk manifested through trait anxiety-depression or polygenic risk for depression are implicated in the expression of states of interpersonal stress at medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) [22], and how these may be modulated by childhood urbanicity [9]

  • In terms of our hypotheses about social threat and trait anxietydepression in relation to urbanicity, we found that trait anxietydepression as measured on the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire Neuroticism score was higher in the urban group (p < 0.05, Table 1), but was independent of age or parental education

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Summary

Introduction

The world has been rapidly urbanizing, and in recent years especially so in Asia, bringing significant economic, social and environmental changes to traditional agrarian societies. There are cultural and geographic variations in the social, economic and physical environments, which Nuance how urbanicity may influence neuropsychiatric risk. Urban living appears associated with chronic stress, depression [8] and psychiatric risk [9,10,11,12], from a number of studies in European-ancestry samples. It would be important to account for ethnic-cultural and socioeconomic contexts, in defining the interacting environmental, and potential genetic mechanisms of psychiatric risk

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