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Genome-wide by Environment Interaction Study of Stressful Life Events and Hospital-Treated Depression in the iPSYCH2012 Sample.

Authors :
Suppli, Nis P
Suppli, Nis P
Andersen, Klaus K
Agerbo, Esben
Rajagopal, Veera M
Appadurai, Vivek
Coleman, Jonathan RI
Breen, Gerome
Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas
Bækvad-Hansen, Marie
Pedersen, Carsten B
Pedersen, Marianne G
Thompson, Wesley K
Munk-Olsen, Trine
Benros, Michael E
Als, Thomas D
Grove, Jakob
Werge, Thomas
Børglum, Anders D
Hougaard, David M
Mors, Ole
Nordentoft, Merete
Mortensen, Preben B
Musliner, Katherine L
Suppli, Nis P
Suppli, Nis P
Andersen, Klaus K
Agerbo, Esben
Rajagopal, Veera M
Appadurai, Vivek
Coleman, Jonathan RI
Breen, Gerome
Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas
Bækvad-Hansen, Marie
Pedersen, Carsten B
Pedersen, Marianne G
Thompson, Wesley K
Munk-Olsen, Trine
Benros, Michael E
Als, Thomas D
Grove, Jakob
Werge, Thomas
Børglum, Anders D
Hougaard, David M
Mors, Ole
Nordentoft, Merete
Mortensen, Preben B
Musliner, Katherine L
Source :
Biological psychiatry global open science; vol 2, iss 4, 400-410; 2667-1743
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BackgroundResearchers have long investigated a hypothesized interaction between genetic risk and stressful life events in the etiology of depression, but studies on the topic have yielded inconsistent results.MethodsWe conducted a genome-wide by environment interaction study (GWEIS) in 18,532 patients with depression from hospital-based settings and 20,184 population controls. All individuals were drawn from the iPSYCH2012 case-cohort study, a nationally representative sample identified from Danish national registers. Information on stressful life events including family disruption, serious medical illness, death of a first-degree relative, parental disability, and child maltreatment was identified from the registers and operationalized as a time-varying count variable. Hazard ratios for main and interaction effects were estimated using Cox regressions weighted to accommodate the case-cohort design. Our replication sample included 22,880 depression cases and 50,378 controls from the UK Biobank.ResultsThe GWEIS in the iPSYCH2012 sample yielded three novel, genome-wide-significant (p < 5 × 10-8) loci located in the ABCC1 gene (rs56076205, p = 3.7 × 10-10), the AKAP6 gene (rs3784187, p = 1.2 × 10-8), and near the MFSD1 gene (rs340315, p = 4.5 × 10-8). No hits replicated in the UK Biobank (rs56076205: p = .87; rs3784187: p = .93; rs340315: p = .71).ConclusionsIn this large, population-based GWEIS, we did not find any replicable hits for interaction. Future gene-by-stress research in depression should focus on establishing even larger collaborative GWEISs to attain sufficient power.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Biological psychiatry global open science; vol 2, iss 4, 400-410; 2667-1743
Notes :
application/pdf, Biological psychiatry global open science vol 2, iss 4, 400-410 2667-1743
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391591321
Document Type :
Electronic Resource