
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword: Making a Creative Difference = Person × Environment
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Biological Bases of Psychology: Genes, Brain, and Beyond
- Section A Feelings, Fears, Stressors, and Coping
- 2 Feelings and Decisions
- 3 My Career in Fear
- 4 Child Poverty and Brain Development
- 5 Try It and Assume Nothing
- 6 Coming Full Circle: From Psychology to Neuroscience and Back
- 7 Hormones, Epigenetics, the Brain, and Behavior
- 8 Brain Plasticity, Science, and Medicine
- Section B Cognitive and Social Neuroscience
- Section C Behavioral and Molecular Genetics
- Part III Cognition: Getting Information from the World and Dealing with It
- Part IV Development: How We Change Over Time
- Part V Motivation and Emotion: How We Feel and What We Do
- Part VI Social and Personality Processes: Who We Are and How We Interact
- Part VII Clinical and Health Psychology: Making Lives Better
- Part VIII Conclusion
- Afterword: Doing Psychology 24×7 and Why It Matters
- Index
- References
7 - Hormones, Epigenetics, the Brain, and Behavior
from Section A - Feelings, Fears, Stressors, and Coping
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2016
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword: Making a Creative Difference = Person × Environment
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Biological Bases of Psychology: Genes, Brain, and Beyond
- Section A Feelings, Fears, Stressors, and Coping
- 2 Feelings and Decisions
- 3 My Career in Fear
- 4 Child Poverty and Brain Development
- 5 Try It and Assume Nothing
- 6 Coming Full Circle: From Psychology to Neuroscience and Back
- 7 Hormones, Epigenetics, the Brain, and Behavior
- 8 Brain Plasticity, Science, and Medicine
- Section B Cognitive and Social Neuroscience
- Section C Behavioral and Molecular Genetics
- Part III Cognition: Getting Information from the World and Dealing with It
- Part IV Development: How We Change Over Time
- Part V Motivation and Emotion: How We Feel and What We Do
- Part VI Social and Personality Processes: Who We Are and How We Interact
- Part VII Clinical and Health Psychology: Making Lives Better
- Part VIII Conclusion
- Afterword: Doing Psychology 24×7 and Why It Matters
- Index
- References
Summary
Trained in chemistry and cell biology, and following post-doctoral work in the new field of “neuroscience,” I became a junior faculty member in the laboratory of Neal Miller at The Rockefeller University in 1966 and was inspired by his integrative view of brain–body interactions and his pioneering work in defining the field of behavioral medicine. Together with my interest in hormone action on gene expression and the fact that very little was known about how and where hormones act in the brain, this led to a serendipitous discovery. In 1968, I discovered that the stress hormone, cortisol, secreted by our adrenal glands, is taken up from the blood and binds to receptors in the brain region known as the hippocampus. We now know that cortisol regulates gene expression and other cellular processes related to cognitive function and mood, acting in the hippocampus as well as elsewhere in the brain by epigenetic mechanisms. Epigenetics is the emerging science of how genes are seamlessly regulated by the environment, and it plays an important role in the emerging collaborations between the social and biological sciences. Here is the story of how this all happened.
What Is This Discovery?
The discovery: that stress hormones affect a brain region that we now know is involved in episodic, spatial, and contextual memory and mood regulation, rather than just affecting the hypothalamus and vegetative functions such as hunger, thirst, and sex. This discovery has triggered many studies on rats and mice, with increasing translation to human stress-related disorders, such as depression and anxiety, accelerated aging, and Alzheimer's disease. We discovered that the effects of acute and chronic stress involve not brain damage, but, rather, a remodeling of neural architecture – turnover of synaptic connections, shrinkage and growth of dendrites, and the suppression of neurogenesis (i.e., the generation of new neurons in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus). This discovery has also engendered a broader view of brain–body interactions that has led me and colleagues to develop the concepts of allostasis and allostatic load and overload (i.e., how the body as well as the brain can be altered by too much stress so as to cause disease, as explained further below).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Scientists Making a DifferenceOne Hundred Eminent Behavioral and Brain Scientists Talk about Their Most Important Contributions, pp. 32 - 36Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016