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Changes in Social Status Seen in Monkeys' GenesBy SINDYA N. BHANOO
Published: April 9, 2012
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Social stress is known to have adverse health effects on both humans and primates.
National Primate Research Center
Researchers found they could predict a female macaque's social ranking by looking at its genes.
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Now, researchers report that it also affects the immune system of female rhesus macaques at the genetic level.
"Social stress seemed to have a relatively strong and pervasive effect on the regulation of the genome," said Jenny Tung , an evolutionary anthropologist at Duke University and the first author of a study on the monkeys; it appears in the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences .
She and her colleagues found differences in nearly 1,000 genes in the white blood cells of macaques. They focused on the monkeys' T cells and other white blood cells that play a role in immunity .
"Although all of the monkeys have the same set of genes in their white blood cells, not all of them turn on these genes to the same degree," Dr. Tung said.
Dr. Tung and her colleagues were able to predict the social ranking of a female macaque with 80 percent accuracy simply by looking at the genes.
They worked with 49 macaques at the Yerkes Primate Research Center at Emory University.
They also found that if a macaque's social rank changed, her gene expression did as well.
"If an individual is able to improve their social environment, the genome is pretty plastic, which is kind of optimistic," Dr. Tung said.
She said the results could provide insight into how to manage stress caused by social status in humans.
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