Christina M. Hough
University of California, San Francisco
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Christina M. Hough.
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2015
Daniel Lindqvist; Elissa S. Epel; Synthia H. Mellon; Brenda W.J.H. Penninx; Dóra Révész; Josine E. Verhoeven; Victor I. Reus; Jue Lin; Laura Mahan; Christina M. Hough; Rebecca Rosser; F. Saverio Bersani; Elizabeth H. Blackburn; Owen M. Wolkowitz
Many psychiatric illnesses are associated with early mortality and with an increased risk of developing physical diseases that are more typically seen in the elderly. Moreover, certain psychiatric illnesses may be associated with accelerated cellular aging, evidenced by shortened leukocyte telomere length (LTL), which could underlie this association. Shortened LTL reflects a cells mitotic history and cumulative exposure to inflammation and oxidation as well as the availability of telomerase, a telomere-lengthening enzyme. Critically short telomeres can cause cells to undergo senescence, apoptosis or genomic instability, and shorter LTL correlates with poorer health and predicts mortality. Emerging data suggest that LTL may be reduced in certain psychiatric illnesses, perhaps in proportion to exposure to the psychiatric illnesses, although conflicting data exist. Telomerase has been less well characterized in psychiatric illnesses, but a role in depression and in antidepressant and neurotrophic effects has been suggested by preclinical and clinical studies. In this article, studies on LTL and telomerase activity in psychiatric illnesses are critically reviewed, potential mediators are discussed, and future directions are suggested. A deeper understanding of cellular aging in psychiatric illnesses could lead to re-conceptualizing them as systemic illnesses with manifestations inside and outside the brain and could identify new treatment targets.
BioMed Research International | 2015
F. Saverio Bersani; Marialuce Coviello; Claudio Imperatori; Marta Francesconi; Christina M. Hough; Giuseppe Valeriani; Gianfranco De Stefano; Flaminia Bolzan Mariotti Posocco; Rita Santacroce; Amedeo Minichino; Ornella Corazza
Obesity and overeating are among the most prevalent health concerns worldwide and individuals are increasingly using performance and image-enhancing drugs (PIEDs) as an easy and fast way to control their weight. Among these, herbal weight-loss products (HWLPs) often attract users due to their health claims, assumed safety, easy availability, affordable price, extensive marketing, and the perceived lack of need for professional oversight. Reports suggest that certain HWLPs may lead to onset or exacerbation of psychiatric disturbances. Here we review the available evidence on psychiatric adverse effects of HWLPs due to their intrinsic toxicity and potential for interaction with psychiatric medications.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2016
Christina M. Hough; Tracy L. Luks; Karen Lai; Ofilio Vigil; Sylvia Guillory; Arvind Nongpiur; Shiva M. Fekri; Eve Kupferman; Daniel H. Mathalon; Carol A. Mathews
We examined differences in regional brain activation during tests of executive function in individuals with Hoarding Disorder (HD), Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), and healthy controls (HC) using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Participants completed computerized versions of the Stroop and Go/No-Go task. We found that during the conflict monitoring and response inhibition condition in the Go/No-Go task, individuals with HD had significantly greater activity than controls in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). HD also exhibited significantly greater right DLPFC activity than OCD. We also observed significant differences in activity between HD and HC and between HD and OCD in regions (ACC, anterior insula, orbitofrontal cortex, and striatum) involved in evaluating stimulus-response-reward associations, or the personal and task-relevant value of stimuli and behavioral responses to stimuli. These results support the hypothesis that individuals with HD have difficulty deciding on the value or task relevance of stimuli, and may perceive an abnormally high risk of negative feedback for difficult or erroneous cognitive behavior.
Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2017
Brittany Fair; Synthia H. Mellon; Elissa S. Epel; Jue Lin; Dóra Révész; Josine E. Verhoeven; Brenda W.J.H. Penninx; Victor I. Reus; Rebecca Rosser; Christina M. Hough; Laura Mahan; Heather M. Burke; Elizabeth H. Blackburn; Owen M. Wolkowitz
OBJECTIVE Leukocyte telomere length (LTL) is a biomarker of cellular aging affected by chronic stress. The relationship of LTL to the stress hormones, cortisol and catecholamines, is unclear, as are possible differences between healthy controls (HC) and individuals with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). This small pilot study is the first to examine the relationship between cortisol, catecholamines and LTL specifically in un-medicated MDD in comparison with HC. METHODS Participants included 16 un-medicated MDD subjects and 15 HC for assay of LTL, 12-hour overnight urinary free cortisol and catecholamine levels. RESULTS LTL, cortisol and catecholamine levels did not significantly differ between groups. In HC, a hierarchical regression analysis indicated that higher levels of cortisol were correlated with shorter LTL (p=0.003) above and beyond age and sex. Higher catecholamine levels were nearly-significant with shorter LTL (p=0.055). Neither hormone was correlated with shorter LTL in MDD (ps>0.28). To assess a possible cumulative effect of stress hormone activation, a summary score was calculated for each subject based on the number of stress hormone levels above the median for that group (HC or MDD). A significant inverse graded relationship was observed between LTL and the number of activated systems in HC (p=0.001), but not in MDD (p=0.96). CONCLUSION This pilot study provides preliminary evidence that stress hormone levels, especially cortisol, are inversely related to LTL in HC, but not in un-medicated MDD. Clarification of these relationships in larger samples could aid in understanding differential mechanisms underlying stress-related cellular aging in healthy and depressed populations.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2018
Daniel Lindqvist; Owen M. Wolkowitz; Martin Picard; Lars Ohlsson; Francesco Saverio Bersani; Johan Fernström; Åsa Westrin; Christina M. Hough; Jue Lin; Victor I. Reus; Elissa S. Epel; Synthia H. Mellon
Major depressive disorder (MDD) has been linked to mitochondrial defects, which could manifest in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) polymorphisms or mutations. Additionally, copy number of mtDNA (mtDNA-cn) can be quantified in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC)s, indirectly reflecting cellular energetics, or in the circulating cell-free mtDNA (ccf-mtDNA) levels, which may reflect a fraction of the mitochondrial genome released during cellular stress. Few studies have examined ccf-mtDNA in MDD, and no studies have tested its relationship with intracellular mtDNA-cn or with antidepressant treatment response. Here, mtDNA levels were quantified in parallel from: (i) PBMCs and (ii) cell-free plasma of 50 unmedicated MDD subjects and 55 controls, in parallel with PBMC telomere length (TL) and antioxidant enzyme glutathione peroxidase (GpX) activity. MtDNA measures were repeated in 19 MDD subjects after 8 weeks of open-label SSRI treatment. In analyses adjusted for age, sex, BMI, and smoking, MDD subjects had significantly elevated levels of ccf-mtDNA (F = 20.6, p = 0.00002). PBMC mtDNA-cn did not differ between groups (p > 0.4). In preliminary analyses, we found that changes in ccf-mtDNA with SSRI treatment differed between SSRI responders and non-responders (F = 6.47, p = 0.02), with the non-responders showing an increase in ccf-mtDNA and responders not changing. Baseline ccf-mtDNA was positively correlated with GpX (r = 0.32, p = 0.001), and PBMC mtDNA correlated positively with PBMC TL (r = 0.38, p = 0.0001). These data suggest that plasma ccf-mtDNA and PBMC mtDNA-cn reflect different cellular processes and that the former may be more reflective of certain aspects of MDD pathophysiology and of the response to SSRI antidepressants.
bioRxiv | 2018
Felipe A. Jain; Colm G. Connolly; Victor I. Reus; Dieter J. Meyerhoff; Tony T. Yang; Synthia H. Mellon; Scott Mackin; Christina M. Hough; Alexandra Morford; Elissa S. Epel; Owen M. Wolkowitz
Background Studies testing the relationship between cortisol levels, depression, and antidepressant treatment response have yielded divergent results suggesting the possibility of moderators of a cortisol effect. Several studies indicate that age may moderate the relationship between cortisol and psychopathology. In patients with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), we studied the interactive effects of age and cortisol on predicting diagnostic status, improvement in mood and memory function with antidepressant treatment, and brain response to negative emotional stimuli. Methods 66 unmedicated patients with MDD and 75 matched healthy controls had serum assayed at pre-treatment baseline for cortisol. Logistic regression was used to determine an association of age, cortisol and their interaction with MDD diagnosis. Thirty-four of the MDD participants (age range: 19-65 years; median: 36) underwent treatment with a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRl) for 8 weeks. Clinician and self-ratings of depression symptoms, as well as tests of verbal and visual delayed recall were obtained at baseline and post treatment. Moderation analyses determined the effect of age on the relationship between baseline cortisol and treatment outcome. A separate sample of 8 MDD participants prospectively underwent fMRI neuroimaging and cortisol collection while viewing negative emotional faces. Results Age moderated the effects of cortisol on predicting MDD diagnosis (p<.05), treatment-associated reduction of depression symptoms (p<.001), improvement of delayed recall (p<.001), and baseline brain response to negative emotions (p<.05, whole brain corrected). Modeling the Age X Cortisol interaction suggested that for the participants below the median age of our sample, lower cortisol levels predicted a lower rate of MDD diagnosis, higher antidepressant effects and decreased brain reactivity in emotion regulation regions such as the anterior cingulate gyrus. On the contrary, in those above the median sample age, lower cortisol predicted a higher rate of MDD, less improvement in depression symptoms and memory performance, and more brain reactivity in the anterior cingulate. Conclusions Our results indicate that age moderates the relationship between peripheral cortisol levels and (1) MDD diagnosis, (2) brain reactivity to emotional stimuli, and (3) antidepressant-associated improvement in depression and memory symptoms. These results indicate that previous disparities in the literature linking peripheral cortisol levels with depression characteristics and treatment response may critically relate, at least in part, to the age of the patients studied.
Biological Psychiatry | 2018
Daniel Lindqvist; Owen M. Wolkowitz; Martin Picard; Lars Ohlsson; Francesco Saverio Bersani; Johan Fernström; Åsa Westrin; Christina M. Hough; Jue Lin; Cécile Grudet; Lennart Ljunggren; Lil Träskman-Bendz; Victor I. Reus; Elissa S. Epel; Synthia H. Mellon
Background: Mitochondrial DNA copy number (mtDNA-cn), which represents the number of mitochondrial genomes per cell, can be quantified in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and is thought to ...
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2017
Daniel Lindqvist; Firdaus S. Dhabhar; S. Jill James; Christina M. Hough; Felipe A. Jain; F. Saverio Bersani; Victor I. Reus; Josine E. Verhoeven; Elissa S. Epel; Laura Mahan; Rebecca Rosser; Owen M. Wolkowitz; Synthia H. Mellon
Molecular Neuropsychiatry | 2016
Christina M. Hough; Francesco Saverio Bersani; Synthia H. Mellon; Elissa S. Epel; Victor I. Reus; Daniel Lindqvist; J Lin; Laura Mahan; Rebecca Rosser; Heather M. Burke; Coetzee J; Nelson Jc; Elizabeth H. Blackburn; Owen M. Wolkowitz
Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2016
Francesco Saverio Bersani; Owen M. Wolkowitz; Jeffrey M. Milush; Elizabeth Sinclair; Lorrie Eppling; Kirstin Aschbacher; Daniel Lindqvist; Rachel Yehuda; Janine D. Flory; Linda M. Bierer; Iouri Matokine; Duna Abu-Amara; Victor I. Reus; Michelle Coy; Christina M. Hough; Charles R. Marmar; Synthia H. Mellon