Abstract

Depression in adults is heritable with about 40 % of the phenotypic variance due to additive genetic effects and the remaining phenotypic variance due to unique (unshared) environmental effects. Common environmental effects shared by family members are rarely found in adults. One possible explanation for this finding is that there is an interaction between genes and the environment which may mask effects of the common environment. To test this hypothesis, we investigated genotype by environment interaction in a large sample of female and male adult twins aged 18–70 years. The anxious depression subscale of the Adult Self Report from the Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment (Achenbach and Rescorla in Manual for the ASEBA adult: forms and profiles, 2003) was completed by 13,022 twins who participate in longitudinal studies of the Netherlands Twin Register. In a single group analysis, we found genotype by unique environment interaction, but no genotype by common environment interaction. However, when conditioning on gender, we observed genotype by common environment interaction in men, with larger common environmental variance in men who are genetically less at risk to develop depression. Although the effect size of the interaction is characterized by large uncertainty, the results show that there is at least some variance due to the common environment in adult depression in men.

Highlights

  • Depression in adults is heritable with about 40 % of the phenotypic variance due to additive genetic effects and the remaining phenotypic variance due to unique environmental effects

  • The effect size of the interaction is characterized by large uncertainty, the results show that there is at least some variance due to the common environment in adult depression in men

  • We studied whether an additive genetic by unique environment interaction (A9E) and/or an additive genetic by common environment interaction (A9C) play any role in adult depression

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Summary

Introduction

Depression in adults is heritable with about 40 % of the phenotypic variance due to additive genetic effects and the remaining phenotypic variance due to unique (unshared) environmental effects. One possible explanation for this finding is that there is an interaction between genes and the environment which may mask effects of the common environment To test this hypothesis, we investigated genotype by environment interaction in a large sample of female and male adult twins aged 18–70 years. The question arises whether common environmental effects on adult depression can be revealed by taking into account such non-linear effects. Another question is why some individuals develop a depression after an adverse environmental event and others do not. Given the ongoing debate of the usefulness of genetic variant by environment interaction studies, either in a candidate gene study or in a genome-wide association study, it is important to know whether nonlinear effects are present for unique environmental effects (see e.g., Dick et al 2015)

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