Abstract

To investigate whether expression-based polygenic risk scores for the insulin receptor gene network (ePRS-IRs) modifiy the association between type of depressive symptoms and health-related quality of life (HRQoL). This cross-sectional study includes 1558 individuals from the Helsinki Birth Cohort Study. Between 2001 and 2004, the Short Form-36 questionnaire was employed to assess mental and physical components of HRQoL and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) to assess depressive symptoms. Depressive symptoms were categorized into minimal (BDI < 10), non-melancholic and melancholic types of depression. The ePRS-IRs were calculated for the hippocampal (hePRS-IR) and the mesocorticolimbic (mePRS-IR) regions of the brain. General linear regression models adjusted for age, sex, population stratification, lifestyle factors and body mass index were applied to analyze the data. Both types of depressive symptoms were associated with lower HRQoL (p < 0.0001). HePRS-IR modified the association between the types of depression and mental HRQoL (p for interaction = 0.005). Melancholic type of depressive symptoms was associated with higher mental HRQoL compared to the non-melancholic symptoms among individuals with low hePRS-IR (adjusted mean 4.1, 95% CI 0.7–7.4, p = 0.018). However, no such difference was evident in moderate or high hePRS-IR groups as higher hePRS-IR was associated with lower mental HRQoL (B = − 3.4, 95% CI − 5.6 to − 1.2) in individuals with melancholic type of depressive symptoms. No direct associations were detected between the ePRS-IRs and type of depressive symptoms or HRQoL. Variations in the glucose-insulin metabolism can lower HRQoL in individuals with melancholic depressive symptoms.

Highlights

  • To investigate whether expression-based polygenic risk scores for the insulin receptor gene network modifiy the association between type of depressive symptoms and health-related quality of life (HRQoL)

  • Our findings indicate that higher hippocampal expression of the insulin receptor gene network is associated with lower mental HRQoL in individuals with symptoms of melancholic depression, suggesting that individual differences in the function of the hippocampal insulin receptor gene network can possibly play a role in the relationship between type of depressive symptoms and HRQoL

  • No evidence of such modifying effect was found for the physical component of HRQoL nor by the mePRS-insulin receptors (IR)

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Summary

Introduction

To investigate whether expression-based polygenic risk scores for the insulin receptor gene network (ePRS-IRs) modifiy the association between type of depressive symptoms and health-related quality of life (HRQoL). This cross-sectional study includes 1558 individuals from the Helsinki Birth Cohort Study. General linear regression models adjusted for age, sex, population stratification, lifestyle factors and body mass index were applied to analyze the data Both types of depressive symptoms were associated with lower HRQoL (p < 0.0001). Melancholic type of depressive symptoms was associated with higher mental HRQoL compared to the non-melancholic symptoms among individuals with low hePRS-IR (adjusted mean 4.1, 95% CI 0.7–7.4, p = 0.018). IRs are more expressed in neurons than in glia cells, and are present in several locations in the brain including the hypothalamus, hippocampus and cerebral c­ ortex[20]

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