Replicable and Coupled Changes in Innate and Adaptive Immune Gene Expression in Two Case-Control Studies of Blood Microarrays in Major Depressive Disorder

Peripheral inflammation is often associated with major depressive disorder (MDD), and immunological biomarkers of depression remain a focus of investigation. We used microarray data on whole blood from two independent case-control studies of MDD: the GlaxoSmithKline–High-Throughput Disease-specific...

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Published inBiological psychiatry (1969) Vol. 83; no. 1; pp. 70 - 80
Main Authors Leday, Gwenaël G.R., Vértes, Petra E., Richardson, Sylvia, Greene, Jonathan R., Regan, Tim, Khan, Shahid, Henderson, Robbie, Freeman, Tom C., Pariante, Carmine M., Harrison, Neil A., Bullmore, Edward, Vertes, Petra, Cardinal, Rudolf, Leday, Gwenael, Freeman, Tom, Hume, David, Wu, Zhaozong, Pariante, Carmine, Cattaneo, Annamaria, Zunszain, Patricia, Borsini, Alessandra, Stewart, Robert, Chandran, David, Carvalho, Livia, Bell, Joshua, Souza-Teodoro, Luis, Perry, Hugh, Harrison, Neil, Drevets, Wayne, Wittenberg, Gayle, Jones, Declan, Stylianou, Annie, Perry, V. Hugh, Drevets, Wayne C., Wittenberg, Gayle M., Bullmore, Edward T.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.01.2018
Elsevier
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Summary:Peripheral inflammation is often associated with major depressive disorder (MDD), and immunological biomarkers of depression remain a focus of investigation. We used microarray data on whole blood from two independent case-control studies of MDD: the GlaxoSmithKline–High-Throughput Disease-specific target Identification Program [GSK-HiTDiP] study (113 patients and 57 healthy control subjects) and the Janssen–Brain Resource Company study (94 patients and 100 control subjects). Genome-wide differential gene expression analysis (18,863 probes) resulted in a p value for each gene in each study. A Bayesian method identified the largest p-value threshold (q = .025) associated with twice the number of genes differentially expressed in both studies compared with the number of coincidental case-control differences expected by chance. A total of 165 genes were differentially expressed in both studies with concordant direction of fold change. The 90 genes overexpressed (or UP genes) in MDD were significantly enriched for immune response to infection, were concentrated in a module of the gene coexpression network associated with innate immunity, and included clusters of genes with correlated expression in monocytes, monocyte-derived dendritic cells, and neutrophils. In contrast, the 75 genes underexpressed (or DOWN genes) in MDD were associated with the adaptive immune response and included clusters of genes with correlated expression in T cells, natural killer cells, and erythroblasts. Consistently, the MDD patients with overexpression of UP genes also had underexpression of DOWN genes (correlation > .70 in both studies). MDD was replicably associated with proinflammatory activation of the peripheral innate immune system, coupled with relative inactivation of the adaptive immune system, indicating the potential of transcriptional biomarkers for immunological stratification of patients with depression.
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ISSN:0006-3223
1873-2402
1873-2402
DOI:10.1016/j.biopsych.2017.01.021