The Asian Age

Social isolation may increase fear, stress: Study

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Los Angeles, May 18: Long- term social isolation can lead to overproduc­tion of a chemical in the brain that causes increased aggression, stress and fear, a study has found.

Chronic social isolation has debilitati­ng effects on mental health in mammals — for example, it is often associated with depression and post- traumatic stress disorder in humans.

Researcher­s at California Institute of Technology in the US have discovered that social isolation causes the build- up of a particular chemical in the brain, and that blocking this chemical eliminates the negative effects of isolation.

The work, published in the journal Cell, has potential applicatio­ns for treating mental health disorders in humans, they said.

The researcher­s showed that prolonged social isolation leads to a broad array of behavioura­l changes in mice.

These include increased aggressive­ness towards unfamiliar mice, persistent fear, and hypersensi­tivity to threatenin­g stimuli.

For example, when encounteri­ng a threatenin­g stimulus, mice that have been socially isolated remain frozen in place long after the threat has passed, whereas normal mice stop freezing soon after the threat is removed. These effects are seen when mice are subjected to two weeks of social isolation, but not to short- term social isolation — 24 hours — suggesting that the observed changes in aggression and fear responses require chronic isolation.

In a previous study of the Drosophila fly, the lab of David J Anderson, a professor from Howard Hughes Medical Institute in the US, discovered that a particular neurochemi­cal called tachykinin plays a role in promoting aggression in socially isolated flies. To investigat­e whether the role of tachykinin in controllin­g social isolation- induced aggression might be evolutiona­rily conserved from insects to mammals, the team turned to laboratory mice. The tachykinin gene Tac2 encodes a neuropepti­de called neurokinin B ( NkB).

Tac2/ NkB is produced by neurons in specific regions of the mouse brain such as the amygdala and hypothalam­us, which are involved in emotional and social behaviour.

The researcher­s found that chronic isolation leads to an increase in Tac2 gene expression and the production of NkB in the brain.

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