Abstract

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is strongly associated with major depressive disorder (MDD), but the shared pathophysiological mechanisms between them are ambiguous, and the aim of this study was to explore the shared genetic features and associated pathways between these two disorders. MDD-related genes and mitochondrial function genes were downloaded from the GeneCards database. Weighted gene co-expression network analysis of Merge Cohort (GSE80432 and GSE34526) was performed to identify PCOS-related genes. Overlaps between PCOS-related genes, MDD-related genes, and mitochondrial function genes were defined as mitochondrial function-related shared genes. Functional enrichment analysis and protein-protein interaction (PPI) network analysis were performed on the shared genes. Functional genes were then identified using Last Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator Regression (LASSO), and a support vector machine (SVM-RFE) was constructed to measure the accuracy of the calculations. Finally, the results were tested using the whole blood datasets GSE54250 (for PCOS) and GSE98793 (for MDD) as external validation sets. A total of 498 PCOS-related genes, 5909 MDD-related genes, and 7232 mitochondrial function genes were acquired, and totally, 40 shared genes were obtained from the overlap of the above three. The shared mitochondrial function genes were enriched for biological processes mainly involving cholesterol biosynthetic process, lipid metabolic process, triglyceride biosynthetic process, response to drug phosphatidic acid biosynthetic process, and endoplasmic reticulum membrane. Based on LASSO regression and SVM-RFE model, NPAS2 and NTS were identified as characteristic genes shared by two disorders. According to two external validation sets for PCOS and MDD, NPAS2 was finally identified as a key shared gene. Our analysis identified a mitochondrial functional gene-NPAS2-as the most critical candidate for linking PCOS and MDD. The present findings may provide new insights into the diagnosis and treatment of PCOS and MDD comorbidities.

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