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Genome-wide association study of major recurrent depression in the U.K. population

Authors :
Frederica Tozzi
Mandy Y.M. Ng
Pierandrea Muglia
Ursula M. Paredes
Ania Korszun
John C. Whittaker
Gerome Breen
Jianxin Shi
Gérard Waeber
Rudolf Uher
Katrina Pirlo
Ian Jones
Amy W. Butler
Sarah Cohen-Woods
Alexandra Schosser
Florian Holsboer
Katherine J. Aitchison
Peter McGuffin
Michael R. Barnes
Margarita Rivera
Ian W. Craig
Martin Preisig
Nicholas John Craddock
Cathryn M. Lewis
Alasdair MacKenzie
Simon Heath
Michael John Owen
Anne Farmer
Michael E. Weale
Lisa Jones
Mark Lathrop
John P. Quinn
Peter Vollenweider
Source :
The American journal of psychiatry
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Objective Studies of major depression in twins and families have shown moderate to high heritability, but extensive molecular studies have failed to identify susceptibility genes convincingly. To detect genetic variants contributing to major depression, the authors performed a genome-wide association study using 1,636 cases of depression ascertained in the U.K. and 1,594 comparison subjects screened negative for psychiatric disorders. Method Cases were collected from 1) a case-control study of recurrent depression (the Depression Case Control [DeCC] study; N=1346), 2) an affected sibling pair linkage study of recurrent depression (probands from the Depression Network [DeNT] study; N=332), and 3) a pharmacogenetic study (the Genome-Based Therapeutic Drugs for Depression [GENDEP] study; N=88). Depression cases and comparison subjects were genotyped at Centre National de Genotypage on the Illumina Human610-Quad BeadChip. After applying stringent quality control criteria for missing genotypes, departure from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, and low minor allele frequency, the authors tested for association to depression using logistic regression, correcting for population ancestry. Results Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in BICC1 achieved suggestive evidence for association, which strengthened after imputation of ungenotyped markers, and in analysis of female depression cases. A meta-analysis of U.K. data with previously published results from studies in Munich and Lausanne showed some evidence for association near neuroligin 1 (NLGN1) on chromosome 3, but did not support findings at BICC1. Conclusions This study identifies several signals for association worthy of further investigation but, as in previous genome-wide studies, suggests that individual gene contributions to depression are likely to have only minor effects, and very large pooled analyses will be required to identify them.

Details

Volume :
167
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American journal of psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb4631efdeb3e5960b526962e4b02ec4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2010.09091380