Peyrot W J, Lee S H, Milaneschi Y, Abdellaoui A, Byrne E M, Esko T, de Geus E J C, Hemani G, Hottenga J J, Kloiber S, Levinson D F, Lucae S, Martin N G, Medland S E, Metspalu A, Milani L, Noethen M M, Potash J B, Rietschel M, Rietveld C A, Ripke S, Shi J, Willemsen G, Zhu Z, Boomsma D I, Wray N R, Penninx B W J H
Department of Psychiatry, VU University Medical Center and GGZ inGeest, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
The University of Queensland, Queensland Brain Institute, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Mol Psychiatry. 2015 Jun;20(6):735-43. doi: 10.1038/mp.2015.50. Epub 2015 Apr 28.
An association between lower educational attainment (EA) and an increased risk for depression has been confirmed in various western countries. This study examines whether pleiotropic genetic effects contribute to this association. Therefore, data were analyzed from a total of 9662 major depressive disorder (MDD) cases and 14,949 controls (with no lifetime MDD diagnosis) from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium with additional Dutch and Estonian data. The association of EA and MDD was assessed with logistic regression in 15,138 individuals indicating a significantly negative association in our sample with an odds ratio for MDD 0.78 (0.75-0.82) per standard deviation increase in EA. With data of 884,105 autosomal common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), three methods were applied to test for pleiotropy between MDD and EA: (i) genetic profile risk scores (GPRS) derived from training data for EA (independent meta-analysis on ~120,000 subjects) and MDD (using a 10-fold leave-one-out procedure in the current sample), (ii) bivariate genomic-relationship-matrix restricted maximum likelihood (GREML) and (iii) SNP effect concordance analysis (SECA). With these methods, we found (i) that the EA-GPRS did not predict MDD status, and MDD-GPRS did not predict EA, (ii) a weak negative genetic correlation with bivariate GREML analyses, but this correlation was not consistently significant, (iii) no evidence for concordance of MDD and EA SNP effects with SECA analysis. To conclude, our study confirms an association of lower EA and MDD risk, but this association was not because of measurable pleiotropic genetic effects, which suggests that environmental factors could be involved, for example, socioeconomic status.
在多个西方国家,较低的教育程度(EA)与抑郁症风险增加之间的关联已得到证实。本研究探讨多效性基因效应是否导致了这种关联。因此,我们分析了来自精神疾病基因组学联盟的总共9662例重度抑郁症(MDD)患者和14949名对照(无终生MDD诊断)的数据,并补充了荷兰和爱沙尼亚的数据。在15138名个体中,通过逻辑回归评估EA与MDD的关联,结果表明在我们的样本中存在显著的负相关,EA每增加一个标准差,MDD的优势比为0.78(0.75 - 0.82)。利用884105个常染色体常见单核苷酸多态性(SNP)的数据,应用三种方法来检验MDD与EA之间的多效性:(i)从EA训练数据(对约120000名受试者进行独立荟萃分析)和MDD(在当前样本中使用10倍留一法)得出的基因谱风险评分(GPRS),(ii)双变量基因组关系矩阵限制最大似然法(GREML),以及(iii)SNP效应一致性分析(SECA)。通过这些方法,我们发现:(i)EA - GPRS不能预测MDD状态,MDD - GPRS也不能预测EA;(ii)双变量GREML分析显示存在弱的负基因相关性,但这种相关性并不始终显著;(iii)SECA分析没有证据表明MDD和EA的SNP效应一致。总之,我们的研究证实了较低的EA与MDD风险之间的关联,但这种关联并非由于可测量的多效性基因效应,这表明环境因素可能起作用,例如社会经济地位。