4.4 Article

Use of the PsycheMERGE Network to Investigate the Association Between Depression Polygenic Scores and White Blood Cell Count

期刊

JAMA PSYCHIATRY
卷 78, 期 12, 页码 1365-1374

出版社

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2021.2959

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资金

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1 RR024975-01]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (Vanderbilt Institute for Clinical and Translational Research) [2 UL1 TR000445-06]
  3. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [1F31MH124306-01A1]
  4. NIH [1R01MH118233-01, 5U54MD010722-04, 5R01MH113362-03, 1R56MH120736-01, R01 MH118233, UL1TR000427, 1U24CA242637-01, R00AG054573, S10RR025141, UL1TR002243, UL1TR000445, UL1RR024975]
  5. NIH, Bethesda, Maryland [K08MH122911, R01AG067025, R01MH125246, R01MH109677]
  6. Brain & Behavior Research Foundation via the 2020 Brain & Behavior Research Foundation [29350]
  7. [U01HG004798]
  8. [R01NS032830]
  9. [RC2GM092618]
  10. [P50GM115305]
  11. [U01HG006378]
  12. [U19HL065962]
  13. [R01HD074711]
  14. [MVP006 (BX004189)]

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This genetic association study found that increased depression polygenic scores were associated with increased white blood cell count, suggesting a bidirectional association. The findings highlight the potential importance of the immune system in the etiology of depression and may lead to the development of clinical biomarkers and targeted treatment options for depression.
Importance Although depression is a common psychiatric disorder, its underlying biological basis remains poorly understood. Pairing depression polygenic scores with the results of clinical laboratory tests can reveal biological processes involved in depression etiology and in the physiological changes resulting from depression. Objective To characterize the association between depression polygenic scores and an inflammatory biomarker, ie, white blood cell count. Design, Setting, and Participants This genetic association study was conducted from May 19, 2019, to June 5, 2021, using electronic health record data from 382 452 patients across 4 health care systems. Analyses were conducted separately in each health care system and meta-analyzed across all systems. Primary analyses were conducted in Vanderbilt University Medical Center's biobank. Replication analyses were conducted across 3 other PsycheMERGE sites: Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Mass General Brigham, and the Million Veteran Program. All patients with available genetic data and recorded white blood cell count measurements were included in the analyses. Primary analyses were conducted in individuals of European descent and then repeated in a population of individuals of African descent. Exposures Depression polygenic scores. Main Outcomes and Measures White blood cell count. Results Across the 4 PsycheMERGE sites, there were 382 452 total participants of European ancestry (18.7% female; median age, 57.9 years) and 12 383 participants of African ancestry (61.1% female; median age, 39.0 [range, birth-90.0 years]). A laboratory-wide association scan revealed a robust association between depression polygenic scores and white blood cell count (beta, 0.03; SE, 0.004; P = 1.07 x 10(-17)), which was replicated in a meta-analysis across the 4 health care systems (beta, 0.03; SE, 0.002; P = 1.03 x 10(-136)). Mediation analyses suggested a bidirectional association, with white blood cell count accounting for 2.5% of the association of depression polygenic score with depression diagnosis (95% CI, 2.2%-20.8%; P = 2.84 x 10(-70)) and depression diagnosis accounting for 9.8% of the association of depression polygenic score with white blood cell count (95% CI, 8.4%-11.1%; P = 1.78 x 10(-44)). Mendelian randomization provided additional support for an association between increased white blood count and depression risk, but depression modeled as the exposure showed no evidence of an influence on white blood cell counts. Conclusions and Relevance This genetic association study found that increased depression polygenic scores were associated with increased white blood cell count, and suggests that this association may be bidirectional. These findings highlight the potential importance of the immune system in the etiology of depression and may motivate future development of clinical biomarkers and targeted treatment options for depression. This genetic association study uses data from Vanderbilt University Medical Center and the PsycheMERGE network to investigate the association between inflammatory biomarkers, such as white blood cell count, and the genes that predispose an individual to depression. Question Are genes that increase predisposition to depression associated with increased inflammatory biomarkers, specifically white blood cell count? Findings In this genetic association study of 382 485 participants, an association was noted between depression polygenic scores and white blood cell count across 4 independent biobanks. Mediation analyses suggest a bidirectional association between white blood cell count and depression diagnosis and implicate neutrophils as the main driver of the association. Meaning These findings suggest that genes associated with depression (rather than only the clinical presentation of depressive symptoms) may be implicated in the proinflammatory state observed in clinical depression; this outcome may motivate future development of targeted biomarker panels and treatments.

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