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Causal role of immune cells in major depressive disorder and bipolar disorder: Mendelian randomization (MR) study.

Authors :
Zhang, Yi
Wang, San-Wang
Ding, Jiahao
Wen, Xin
Li, Tingting
Yang, Lu
Peng, Jintao
Dong, Yingying
Mi, Weifeng
Gao, Yujun
Sun, Guizhi
Source :
Journal of Affective Disorders. Sep2024, Vol. 361, p165-171. 7p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Major depressive disorder (MDD) and bipolar disorder (BD) are prevalent psychiatric conditions linked to inflammatory processes. However, it is unclear whether associations of immune cells with these disorders are likely to be causal. We used two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) approach to investigate the relationship between 731 immune cells and the risk of MDD and BD. Rigorous sensitivity analyses are conducted to assess the reliability, heterogeneity, and horizontal pleiotropy of the findings. Genetically-predicted CD27 on IgD+ CD38− unswitched memory B cell (inverse variance weighting (IVW): odds ratio (OR) [95 %]: 1.017 [1.007 to 1.027], p = 0.001), CD27 on IgD+ CD24+ B cell (IVW: OR [95 %]: 1.021 [1.011 to 1.031], p = 4.821E−05) and other 12 immune cells were associated with increased risk of MDD in MR, while HLA DR++ monocyte %leukocyte (IVW: OR [95 %]: 0.973 [0.948 to 0.998], p = 0.038), CD4 on Central Memory CD4+ T cell (IVW: OR [95 %]: 0.979 [0.963 to 0.995], p = 0.011) and other 13 immune cells were associated with decreased risk of MDD in MR. Additionally, CD33+ HLA DR+ Absolute Count (IVW: OR [95 %]: 1.022[1.007 to 1.036], p = 0.007), CD28+ CD45RA− CD8+ T cell %T cell (IVW: OR [95 %]: 1.024 [1.008 to 1.041], p = 0.004) and other 18 immune cells were associated with increased risk of BD in MR, while CD62L on CD62L+ myeloid Dendritic Cell (IVW: OR [95 %]: 0.926 [0.871 to 0.985], p = 0.014), IgD− CD27− B cell %lymphocyte (IVW: OR [95 %]: 0.918 [0.880 to 0.956], p = 4.654E−05) and other 13 immune cells were associated with decreased risk of BD in MR. This MR study provides robust evidence supporting a causal relationship between immune cells and the susceptibility to MDD and BD, offering valuable insights for future clinical investigations. Experimental studies are also required to further examine causality, mechanisms, and treatment potential for these immune cells for MDD and BD. • Early life infection is linked with autoimmune disease and subsequent psychiatric disorders in adults. • Complex immune-brain interactions may have causal and therapeutic implications for MDD and BD. • MR can control residual factors including limited sample size and flawed study design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01650327
Volume :
361
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178422056
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2024.05.106