Publications by authors named "Meaney M"

Background: Early life stress (ELS) refers to exposure to negative childhood experiences, such as neglect, disaster, and physical, mental, or emotional abuse. ELS can permanently alter the brain, leading to cognitive impairment, increased sensitivity to future stressors, and mental health risks. The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is a key brain region implicated in the effects of ELS.

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Cardiometabolic and psychiatric disorders often co-exist and share common early life risk factors, such as low birth weight. However, the biological pathways linking early adversity to adult cardiometabolic/psychiatric comorbidity remain unknown. Dopamine (DA) neurotransmission in the striatum is sensitive to early adversity and influences the development of both cardiometabolic and psychiatric diseases.

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Background: Phenotypic age (PhenoAge), a widely used marker of biological aging, has been shown to be a robust predictor of all-cause mortality and morbidity in different populations. Existing studies on biological aging have primarily focused on individual domains, resulting in a lack of a comprehensive understanding of the multi-systemic dysregulation that occurs in aging.

Methods: PhenoAge was evaluated based on a linear combination of chronological age (CA) and 9 clinical biomarkers in 952 multi-ethnic Asian women of reproductive age.

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Background: Harsh parenting in early childhood is related to offspring's adverse behavioral outcomes. Due to the scarcity of longitudinal neuroimaging data, few studies have explored the neurobiological underpinnings of this association, focusing on within-person variability. This study examined the temporal associations among harsh parenting, later behavioral problems, and the developmental trajectories of amygdala volume and amygdala resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) profiles, using longitudinal neuroimaging data.

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Objective: Offspring of mothers with depression are at increased risk for executive function (EF) deficits and later depressive symptoms, but limited studies have examined EF as an intermediary pathway. This study examined the role of EF in mediating the association between maternal and child depressive symptoms.

Method: Data were from a longitudinal birth cohort comprising 739 participants followed from the antenatal period for 12 years.

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Background: Universal screening for depression and anxiety in pregnancy has been recommended by several leading medical organizations, but the implementation of such screening protocols may overburden health care systems lacking relevant resources. Text message screening may provide a low-cost, accessible alternative to in-person screening assessments. However, it is critical to understand who is likely to participate in text message-based screening protocols before such approaches can be implemented at the population level.

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Disorganized attachment is a risk for mental health problems, with increasing work focused on understanding biological mechanisms. Examining late childhood brain morphology may be informative - this stage coincides with the onset of many mental health problems. Past late childhood research reveals promising candidates, including frontal lobe cortical thickness and hippocampal volume.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the link between evening-chronotype children, sleep issues, and socioemotional problems during preschool and later school age, emphasizing that evening-chronotype children experience more socioemotional challenges and sleep difficulties.
  • - Using data from 399 preschoolers, researchers looked at how sleep problems and duration influenced the relationship between chronotype and socioemotional issues, revealing that sleep problems, not duration, played a key mediating role as the children grew older.
  • - The findings suggest that addressing sleep problems early on can potentially mitigate socioemotional issues in school-aged children, particularly those with an evening chronotype.
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  • A study examined how physical activity, sedentary behavior, and sleep—collectively known as 24-h movement behaviors—affect cognitive development in children, specifically focusing on executive function and academic performance.
  • The research involved 432 children in Singapore aged 5.5 to 9 years, using wrist-worn accelerometers to accurately measure their movement behaviors and various cognitive assessments to gauge outcomes.
  • Findings revealed that while overall 24-h movement behaviors didn't link to cognitive performance, reallocating time from moderate-to-vigorous physical activity to sleep improved academic achievement scores.
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Background: Factors such as anxiety, worry, and perceptions of insufficient knowledge about a topic motivate individuals to seek web-based health information to guide their health-related decision-making. These factors converged during the COVID-19 pandemic and were linked to COVID-19 vaccination decision-making. While research shows that web-based search relevant to COVID-19 was associated with subsequent vaccine uptake, less is known about COVID-19 vaccine intent search (which assesses vaccine availability, accessibility, and eligibility) as a signal of vaccine readiness.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how genetic factors and stressors contribute to major depressive disorder (MDD) by analyzing gene expression and stress patterns in a cohort of 1083 individuals from Southwest Montreal, Canada.
  • Using advanced statistical methods, researchers identified 3321 genes linked to MDD and discovered that different stress patterns can enhance genetic susceptibility to the disorder, particularly in specific brain tissues.
  • The limitations of the study include its focus on a predominantly Caucasian sample, which may limit the applicability of the findings to diverse ethnic populations.
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Article Synopsis
  • * Two systematic reviews examined the relationship between brain structure, puberty, and mental health outcomes in young people, finding mixed results regarding early puberty's association with mental health issues and the role of brain structure.
  • * The studies suggest that observable physical changes during puberty may better predict mental health problems like depression and anxiety than hormonal measures, indicating that social factors might play a more critical role in these connections.
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Understanding the shared and divergent mechanisms across antidepressant (AD) classes and probiotics is critical for improving treatment for mood disorders. Here we examine the transcriptomic effects of bupropion (NDRI), desipramine (SNRI), fluoxetine (SSRI) and a probiotic formulation (Lacidofil®) on 10 regions across the mammalian brain. These treatments massively alter gene expression (on average, 2211 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) per region-treatment combination), highlighting the biological complexity of AD and probiotic action.

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A balanced excitation-inhibition ratio (E/I ratio) is critical for healthy brain function. Normative development of cortex-wide E/I ratio remains unknown. Here, we noninvasively estimate a putative marker of whole-cortex E/I ratio by fitting a large-scale biophysically plausible circuit model to resting-state functional MRI (fMRI) data.

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Importance: Although patients with head and neck cancer (HNC) have been shown to experience high distress, few longitudinal studies include a comprehensive evaluation of biopsychosocial factors affecting quality of life (QoL), including genetic risk for depression.

Objective: To identify factors at the time of cancer diagnosis associated with QoL scores at 3 months after treatment in patients newly diagnosed with a first occurrence of HNC.

Design, Setting, And Participants: This prospective longitudinal study of 1464 participants with a 3-month follow-up, including structured clinical interviews and self-administered measures was carried out at the Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery at 2 tertiary care McGill University Affiliated Hospitals, McGill University Health Centre, and Jewish General Hospital.

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Early life adversity has been posited to influence the pace of structural neurodevelopment. Most research, however, has relied on cross-sectional data, which do not reveal whether the pace of neurodevelopmental change is accelerated or slowed following early exposures. In a birth cohort study that included neuroimaging data obtained at 4.

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There are inter-individual differences in susceptibility to the influence of early life experiences for which the underlying neurobiological mechanisms are poorly understood. Microglia play a role in environmental surveillance and may influence individual susceptibility to environmental factors. As an index of neurodevelopment, we estimated individual slopes of mean white matter fractional anisotropy (WM-FA) across three time-points (age 4.

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There is a two-fold higher incidence of depression in females compared to men with recent studies suggesting a role for microglia in conferring this sex-dependent depression risk. In this study we investigated the nature of this relation. Using GWAS enrichment, gene-set enrichment analysis and Mendelian randomization, we found minimal evidence for a direct relation between genes functionally related to microglia and sex-dependent genetic risk for depression.

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A balanced excitation-inhibition ratio (E/I ratio) is critical for healthy brain function. Normative development of cortex-wide E/I ratio remains unknown. Here we non-invasively estimate a putative marker of whole-cortex E/I ratio by fitting a large-scale biophysically-plausible circuit model to resting-state functional MRI (fMRI) data.

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The endogenous opioid system is thought to play an important role in mother-infant attachment. In infant rhesus macaques, variation in the μ-opioid receptor gene (OPRM1) is related to differences in attachment behavior that emerges following repeated separation from the mother; specifically, infants carrying at least one copy of the minor G allele of the OPRM1 C77G polymorphism show heightened and more persistent separation distress, as well as a pattern of increased contact-seeking behavior directed towards the mother during reunions (at the expense of affiliation with other group members). Research in adult humans has also linked the minor G allele of the analogous OPRM1 A118G polymorphism with greater interpersonal sensitivity.

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Introduction: Pharmacogenetics currently supports clinical decision-making on the basis of a limited number of variants in a few genes and may benefit paediatric prescribing where there is a need for more precise dosing. Integrating genomic information such as methylation into pharmacogenetic models holds the potential to improve their accuracy and consequently prescribing decisions. Cytochrome P450 2D6 () is a highly polymorphic gene conventionally associated with the metabolism of commonly used drugs and endogenous substrates.

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Objective: Maternal stress influences in utero brain development and is a modifiable risk factor for offspring psychopathologies. Reward circuitry dysfunction underlies various internalizing and externalizing psychopathologies. This study examined (1) the association between maternal stress and microstructural characteristics of the neonatal nucleus accumbens (NAcc), a major node of the reward circuitry, and (2) whether neonatal NAcc microstructure modulates individual susceptibility to maternal stress in relation to childhood behavioral problems.

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Background/objectives: Ostracism may lead to increased food intake, yet it is unclear whether greater reactivity to ostracism contributes to higher body mass index (BMI). We investigated whether children who exhibited greater stress to social exclusion subsequently consume more energy and whether this predicts BMI 6- and 18-months later.

Subjects/methods: Children (8.

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Article Synopsis
  • Maternal asthma symptoms during pregnancy are linked to increased behavioral and executive function problems in children, unlike paternal asthma symptoms.
  • The study analyzed data from 844 families and found that children of mothers with asthma symptoms displayed more significant issues compared to those whose mothers did not have such symptoms.
  • Results suggest that maternal prenatal asthma affects child internalizing symptoms and executive function, with paternal asthma showing no direct impact on child outcomes.
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Background: Screen time in infancy is linked to changes in social-emotional development but the pathway underlying this association remains unknown. We aim to provide mechanistic insights into this association using brain network topology and to examine the potential role of parent-child reading in mitigating the effects of screen time.

Methods: We examined the association of screen time on brain network topology using linear regression analysis and tested if the network topology mediated the association between screen time and later socio-emotional competence.

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