TY - JOUR
T1 - Depression as sickness behavior? A test of the host defense hypothesis in a high pathogen population
AU - Stieglitz, Jonathan
AU - Trumble, Benjamin C.
AU - Thompson, Melissa Emery
AU - Blackwell, Aaron D.
AU - Kaplan, Hillard
AU - Gurven, Michael
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the Tsimane for participating and THLHP personnel for collecting and coding data. Ivan Maldonado Suarez carefully conducted antigen stimulation protocols. Ed Hagen and two anonymous reviewers provided important comments that improved the quality of the manuscript. Funding comes from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute on Aging ( R01AG024119 and R56AG024119 ), and from the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) – Labex IAST. Funding sources had no direct involvement in study design, data collection, analysis, interpretation of data, or manuscript preparation or submission.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Inc..
PY - 2015/10/1
Y1 - 2015/10/1
N2 - Sadness is an emotion universally recognized across cultures, suggesting it plays an important functional role in regulating human behavior. Numerous adaptive explanations of persistent sadness interfering with daily functioning (hereafter "depression") have been proposed, but most do not explain frequent bidirectional associations between depression and greater immune activation. Here we test several predictions of the host defense hypothesis, which posits that depression is part of a broader coordinated evolved response to infection or tissue injury (i.e. "sickness behavior") that promotes energy conservation and reallocation to facilitate immune activation. In a high pathogen population of lean and relatively egalitarian Bolivian forager-horticulturalists, we test whether depression and its symptoms are associated with greater baseline concentration of immune biomarkers reliably associated with depression in Western populations (i.e. tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-α], interleukin-1 beta [IL-1β], interleukin-6 [IL-6], and C-reactive protein [CRP]). We also test whether greater pro-inflammatory cytokine responses to ex vivo antigen stimulation are associated with depression and its symptoms, which is expected if depression facilitates immune activation. These predictions are largely supported in a sample of older adult Tsimane (mean±SD age=53.2±11.0, range=34-85, n=649) after adjusting for potential confounders. Emotional, cognitive and somatic symptoms of depression are each associated with greater immune activation, both at baseline and in response to ex vivo stimulation. The association between depression and greater immune activation is therefore not unique to Western populations. While our findings are not predicted by other adaptive hypotheses of depression, they are not incompatible with those hypotheses and future research is necessary to isolate and test competing predictions.
AB - Sadness is an emotion universally recognized across cultures, suggesting it plays an important functional role in regulating human behavior. Numerous adaptive explanations of persistent sadness interfering with daily functioning (hereafter "depression") have been proposed, but most do not explain frequent bidirectional associations between depression and greater immune activation. Here we test several predictions of the host defense hypothesis, which posits that depression is part of a broader coordinated evolved response to infection or tissue injury (i.e. "sickness behavior") that promotes energy conservation and reallocation to facilitate immune activation. In a high pathogen population of lean and relatively egalitarian Bolivian forager-horticulturalists, we test whether depression and its symptoms are associated with greater baseline concentration of immune biomarkers reliably associated with depression in Western populations (i.e. tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-α], interleukin-1 beta [IL-1β], interleukin-6 [IL-6], and C-reactive protein [CRP]). We also test whether greater pro-inflammatory cytokine responses to ex vivo antigen stimulation are associated with depression and its symptoms, which is expected if depression facilitates immune activation. These predictions are largely supported in a sample of older adult Tsimane (mean±SD age=53.2±11.0, range=34-85, n=649) after adjusting for potential confounders. Emotional, cognitive and somatic symptoms of depression are each associated with greater immune activation, both at baseline and in response to ex vivo stimulation. The association between depression and greater immune activation is therefore not unique to Western populations. While our findings are not predicted by other adaptive hypotheses of depression, they are not incompatible with those hypotheses and future research is necessary to isolate and test competing predictions.
KW - Depression
KW - Evolution
KW - Host defense
KW - Immune activation
KW - Sickness behavior
KW - Tsimane
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U2 - 10.1016/j.bbi.2015.05.008
DO - 10.1016/j.bbi.2015.05.008
M3 - Article
C2 - 26044086
AN - SCOPUS:84940601498
SN - 0889-1591
VL - 49
SP - 130
EP - 139
JO - Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
JF - Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
ER -