TY - JOUR
T1 - Salivary nerve growth factor reactivity to acute psychosocial stress
T2 - A new frontier for stress research
AU - Laurent, Heidemarie K.
AU - Laurent, Sean M.
AU - Granger, Douglas A.
PY - 2013/10
Y1 - 2013/10
N2 - Objective: Neurotrophins such as nerve growth factor (NGF) may represent a stress-responsive system complementing the better known neuroendocrine (hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis) and autonomic nervous system, but there is little evidence for NGF response to acute stress in humans because noninvasive measures have not been available. We investigated salivary NGF (sNGF) in 40 healthy young adults confronting a romantic conflict stressor. Methods: Five saliva samples - two collected before and three after the conflict - were assayed for sNGF, cortisol (hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal marker), and α-amylase (sAA; ANS marker). In addition, a control group (n = 20) gave saliva samples at the same time intervals to determine whether sNGF changes were specific to the conflict stressor. Results: sNGF showed significant reactivity from entry to the first poststress sample among study participants (β = .13, p = .001), with nonsignificant change across poststress samples. Control participants showed no change in sNGF across the same period. Within-person changes in sNGF were generally aligned with both cortisol (β = .17, p = .003) and sAA (β = .17, p = .021) responses. Preconflict negative emotion predicted lower sNGF reactivity (β = -.08, p = .009) and less alignment with sAA (β = -.09, p = .040), whereas positive emotion predicted less alignment with cortisol (β = -.10, p = .019). Conclusions: This study is the first to document sNGF as a marker that responds to stress in humans.
AB - Objective: Neurotrophins such as nerve growth factor (NGF) may represent a stress-responsive system complementing the better known neuroendocrine (hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis) and autonomic nervous system, but there is little evidence for NGF response to acute stress in humans because noninvasive measures have not been available. We investigated salivary NGF (sNGF) in 40 healthy young adults confronting a romantic conflict stressor. Methods: Five saliva samples - two collected before and three after the conflict - were assayed for sNGF, cortisol (hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal marker), and α-amylase (sAA; ANS marker). In addition, a control group (n = 20) gave saliva samples at the same time intervals to determine whether sNGF changes were specific to the conflict stressor. Results: sNGF showed significant reactivity from entry to the first poststress sample among study participants (β = .13, p = .001), with nonsignificant change across poststress samples. Control participants showed no change in sNGF across the same period. Within-person changes in sNGF were generally aligned with both cortisol (β = .17, p = .003) and sAA (β = .17, p = .021) responses. Preconflict negative emotion predicted lower sNGF reactivity (β = -.08, p = .009) and less alignment with sAA (β = -.09, p = .040), whereas positive emotion predicted less alignment with cortisol (β = -.10, p = .019). Conclusions: This study is the first to document sNGF as a marker that responds to stress in humans.
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U2 - 10.1097/PSY.0b013e3182a85ffd
DO - 10.1097/PSY.0b013e3182a85ffd
M3 - Article
C2 - 24077771
AN - SCOPUS:84886092554
SN - 0033-3174
VL - 75
SP - 744
EP - 750
JO - Psychosomatic medicine
JF - Psychosomatic medicine
IS - 8
ER -