Abstract

It is well known that depression is associated with asthma symptoms. We assessed the combined effects of genetic factors and depression on asthma symptom severity using Bayesian network (BN) analysis. The common 100 top-ranked single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were obtained from two genome-wide association studies of symptom severity in two childhood asthmatics trials (CAMP (Childhood Asthma Management Program) and CARE (Childhood Asthma Research and Education)). Using SNPs plus five discretized variables (depression, anxiety, age, sex, and race), we performed BN analysis in 529 CAMP subjects. We identified two nodes (depression and rs4672619 mapping to ERBB4 (Erb-B2 receptor tyrosine kinase 4)) that were within the Markov neighborhood of the symptom node in the network and then evaluated the interactive effects of depressive status and rs4672619 genotypes on asthma symptom severity. In childhood asthmatics with homozygous reference alleles, severe depression was related to less severe symptoms. However, in childhood asthmatics with heterozygous alleles and homozygous variant alleles, depression and symptom severity showed a positive correlation (interaction permutation P value = 0.019). We then tried to evaluate whether the interactive effects that we found were sustained in another independent cohort of elderly asthmatics. Contrary to the findings from childhood asthmatics, elderly asthmatics with homozygous reference alleles showed a positive correlation between depression and symptom severity, and elderly asthmatics with heterozygous alleles and homozygous variant alleles showed a negative correlation (interaction permutation P value = 0.003). In conclusion, we have identified a novel SNP, rs4672619, that shows interactive effects with depression on asthma symptom severity in childhood and elderly asthmatics in opposite directions.

Highlights

  • A depressive disorder may influence the symptoms present in the course of a chronic illness

  • Identifying single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with asthma symptoms To obtain reliable SNPs associated with asthma symptoms, we used the results of two genome-wide association study (GWAS) performed in the non-Hispanic white children with asthma enrolled in the Childhood Asthma Management Program (CAMP) trial (n = 438) and in the Childhood Asthma Research and Education (CARE) trials (n = 457)

  • There were 413 common SNPs with P values

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Summary

Introduction

A depressive disorder may influence the symptoms present in the course of a chronic illness. The presence of depression was shown to be a stronger predictor of reporting diabetes symptoms than hemoglobin. A1C level and was more highly associated with chest pain than objective measures of coronary artery disease severity[1,2]. Epidemiologic associations between depression and asthma symptoms have been recognized anecdotally for many years[3,4,5]. Dysregulation in key biologic systems, such as inflammation[6], neuroendocrine dysregulation[7], autonomic imbalance causing cholinergic activation[8], and genetics dysregulation[9], have been suggested as explanations of this co-occurrence. Official journal of the Korean Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

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