Researchers have found new evidence that explains how some aspects of
our personality may affect our health and wellbeing, supporting
long-observed associations between aspects of human character, physical
health and longevity.
A team of health psychologists at The University of Nottingham and
the University of California in Los Angeles carried out a study to
examine the relationship between certain personality traits and the
expression of genes that can affect our health by controlling the
activity of our immune systems.
The study did not find any results to support a common theory that
tendencies toward negative emotions such as depression or anxiety can
lead to poor health (disease-prone personality). What was related to
differences in immune cell gene expression were a person's degree of
extraversion and conscientiousness.
The study used highly sensitive microarray technology to examine
relationships between the five major human personality traits and two
groups of genes active in human white blood cells (leukocytes): one
involving inflammation, and another involving antiviral responses and
antibodies.
A group of 121 ethnically diverse and healthy adults were recruited.
These were comprised of 86 females and 35 males with an average age of
24 (range 18-59) and an average body mass index of 23. The participants
completed a personality test which measures five major dimensions of
personality -- extraversion, neuroticism, openness, agreeableness and
conscientiousness -- (NEO-FFI McCrae and Costa, 2004). Blood samples
were collected from each volunteer for gene expression analysis and
their typical smoking, drinking and exercise behaviors were also
recorded for control purposes. Gene expression analysis was carried out
at the Social Genomics Core Laboratory at UCLA.
Leading the research, Professor Kavita Vedhara, from The University
of Nottingham's School of Medicine, said: "Our results indicated that
'extraversion' was significantly associated with an increased expression
of pro-inflammatory genes and that 'conscientiousness' was linked to a
reduced expression of pro-inflammatory genes. In other words,
individuals who we would expect to be exposed to more infections as a
result of their socially orientated nature (i.e., extraverts) appear to
have immune systems that we would expect can deal effectively with
infection. While individuals who may be less exposed to infections
because of their cautious/conscientious dispositions have immune systems
that may respond less well. We can't, however, say which came first. Is
this our biology determining our psychology or our psychology
determining our biology?"
These two clear associations were independent of the recorded health
behaviors of the participants and subsets of white blood cells which are
the cells of the body's immune system. They were also independent of
the amount of negative emotions people experienced. The study also found
that expression of antiviral/antibody-related genes was not
significantly associated with any personality dimension.
In the remaining three categories of personality, 'openness' also
trended towards a reduced expression of pro-inflammatory genes and
'neuroticism' and 'agreeableness' remained unassociated with gene
expression.
The research concludes that although the biological mechanisms of
these associations need to be explored in future research, these new
data may shed new light on the long-observed epidemiological
associations between personality, physical health, and human longevity.
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