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Serotonergic multilocus genetic variation moderates the association between interpersonal relationship and adolescent depressive symptoms. | LitMetric

Serotonergic multilocus genetic variation moderates the association between interpersonal relationship and adolescent depressive symptoms.

J Affect Disord

School of Educational Science, Hunan Normal University, Changsha 410081, China; Research Center for Mental Health Education of Hunan Province, Changsha 410100, China; Cognition and Human Behavior Key Laboratory of Hunan Province, Changsha 410081, China; Center for Mind-Brain Science, Hunan Normal Un

Published: November 2023


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Article Abstract

Background: Research suggests that genetic variants linked to serotonin functioning moderate the association between environmental stressors and depressive symptoms, but examining gene-environment interactions with single polymorphisms limits power.

Methods: A multilocus genetic profile score (MGPS) approach to measuring serotonergic multilocus genetic variation and examined interactions with interpersonal relationship, insomnia with depressive symptoms as outcomes in an adolescent sample (average age = 14.15 ± 0.63 years since first measurement; range: 13 to 15).

Results: (1) interpersonal relationship predicted adolescent depressive symptoms; (2) insomnia mediated the effect of interpersonal relationships on adolescent depressive symptoms; (3) the THP2 gene rs4570625 polymorphism G allele was a key risk factor for depressive symptom, and the MGPS moderated the effects of teacher-student relationship and insomnia on adolescent depressive symptom. Specifically, as the MGPS increased, the effects of insomnia on adolescent depressive symptom were enhanced; further, when the MGPS score increased, the effect of teacher-student relationship on depression showed a similar phenomenon with an increased slope and enhanced prediction; and (4) the results of sensitivity analysis showed that multilocus genetic interaction with the environment had a better explanatory power and stability for depression than single polymorphism studies.

Conclusion: MGPS provides substantial power to examine gene-environmental interactions linked to affective outcomes among adolescents.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2023.08.085DOI Listing

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