Strath Larissa J, Peterson Jessica A, Meng Lingsong, Rani Asha, Huo Zhiguang, Foster Thomas C, Fillingim Roger B, Cruz-Almeida Yenisel
Pain Research & Intervention Center of Excellence (PRICE), University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida; Department of Community Dentistry and Behavioral Science, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.
Department of Biostatistics, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.
J Pain. 2024 Feb;25(2):293-301. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2023.06.002. Epub 2023 Jun 12.
Chronic musculoskeletal pain is often associated with lower socioeconomic status (SES). SES correlates with psychological and environmental conditions that could contribute to the disproportionate burden of chronic stress. Chronic stress can induce changes in global DNA methylation and gene expression, which increases risk of chronic pain. We aimed to explore the association of epigenetic aging and SES in middle-to-older age individuals with varying degrees of knee pain. Participants completed self-reported pain, a blood draw, and answered demographic questions pertaining to SES. We used an epigenetic clock previously associated with knee pain (DNAmGrimAge) and the subsequent difference of predicted epigenetic age (DNAmGrimAge-Diff). Overall, the mean DNAmGrimAge was 60.3 (±7.6), and the average DNAmGrimAge-diff was 2.4 years (±5.6 years). Those experiencing high-impact pain earned less income and had lower education levels compared to both low-impact and no pain groups. Differences in DNAmGrimAge-diff across pain groups were found, whereby individuals with high-impact pain had accelerated epigenetic aging (∼5 years) compared to low-impact pain and no pain control groups (both ∼1 year). Our main finding was that epigenetic aging mediated the associations of income and education with pain impact, as such the relationship between SES and pain outcomes may occur through potential interactions with the epigenome reflective of accelerated cellular aging. PERSPECTIVE: Socioeconomic status (SES) has previously been implicated in the pain experience. The present manuscript aims to present a potential social-biological link between SES and pain via accelerated epigenetic aging.
慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛通常与较低的社会经济地位(SES)相关。SES与可能导致慢性应激负担过重的心理和环境状况相关。慢性应激可引起全基因组DNA甲基化和基因表达的变化,从而增加慢性疼痛的风险。我们旨在探讨不同程度膝关节疼痛的中老年个体中表观遗传衰老与SES之间的关联。参与者完成了自我报告的疼痛情况、血液采集,并回答了与SES相关的人口统计学问题。我们使用了先前与膝关节疼痛相关的表观遗传时钟(DNAmGrimAge)以及预测表观遗传年龄的后续差异(DNAmGrimAge-Diff)。总体而言,DNAmGrimAge的平均值为60.3(±7.6),DNAmGrimAge-diff的平均值为2.4岁(±5.6岁)。与低影响疼痛组和无疼痛组相比,经历高影响疼痛的个体收入较低且教育水平较低。在疼痛组之间发现了DNAmGrimAge-diff的差异,与低影响疼痛组和无疼痛对照组(均约为1年)相比,高影响疼痛的个体表观遗传衰老加速(约5年)。我们的主要发现是,表观遗传衰老介导了收入和教育与疼痛影响之间的关联,因此SES与疼痛结果之间的关系可能通过与反映细胞衰老加速的表观基因组的潜在相互作用而发生。观点:社会经济地位(SES)先前已被认为与疼痛体验有关。本手稿旨在通过加速表观遗传衰老来呈现SES与疼痛之间潜在的社会生物学联系。