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Genetic heterogeneity and subtypes of major depression

Authors :
Thuy-Dung Nguyen
Arvid Harder
Ying Xiong
Kaarina Kowalec
Sara Hägg
Na Cai
Ralf Kuja-Halkola
Christina Dalman
Patrick F. Sullivan
Yi Lu
Source :
Mol Psychiatry, Mol. Psychiatry 27, 1667–1675 (2022)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Major depression (MD) is a heterogeneous disorder; however, the extent to which genetic factors distinguish MD patient subgroups (genetic heterogeneity) remains uncertain. This study sought evidence for genetic heterogeneity in MD. Using UK Biobank cohort, the authors defined 16 MD subtypes within eight comparison groups (vegetative symptoms, symptom severity, comorbid anxiety disorder, age at onset, recurrence, suicidality, impairment and postpartum depression; N~3 000-47 000). To compare genetic component of these subtypes, subtype-specific genome-wide association studies were performed to estimate SNP-heritability, and genetic correlations within subtype comparison and with other related disorders or traits. The findings indicated that MD subtypes were divergent in their SNP-heritability, and genetic correlations both within subtype comparisons and with other related disorders/traits. Three subtype comparisons (vegetative symptoms, age at onset, and impairment) showed significant differences in SNP-heritability; while genetic correlations within subtypes comparisons ranged from 0.55 to 0.86, suggesting genetic profiles are only partially shared among MD subtypes. Furthermore, subtypes that are more clinically challenging, e.g., early-onset, recurrent, suicidal, more severely impaired, had stronger genetic correlations with other psychiatric disorders. MD with atypical-like features showed a positive genetic correlation (+0.40) with BMI while a negative correlation (−0.09) was found in those without atypical-like features. Novel genomic loci with subtype-specific effects were identified. These results provide the most comprehensive evidence to date for genetic heterogeneity within MD, and suggest that the phenotypic complexity of MD can be effectively reduced by studying the subtypes which share partially distinct etiologies.

Details

ISSN :
14765578
Volume :
27
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5fabc24496443778c4b7af50a304b780