Research on gene × environment (G × E) interaction in major depressive disorder (MDD) aims to understand the heterogeneity of environmental and genetic risk factors, but has thus far primarily focused on candidate genes with inconclusive findings.Reference Duncan and Keller1,Reference Klengel and Binder2 On the one hand, research on G × E interaction could select individuals with increased vulnerability for environmental factors based on their genetic make-up. Alternatively, research on G × E interaction could select environmental conditions that lead to increased expression of genetic effects. Insights into G × E interaction is therefore of general importance for psychiatric research and contributes to the understanding of MDD’s complex aetiology.
Thus far, G × E interaction has primarily been tested for candidate genes such as the serotonin transporter gene (5-HTTLPR), for which opposing results were found in very similar single studies,Reference Caspi, Sugden, Moffitt, Taylor, Craig and Harrington3,Reference Fergusson, Horwood, Miller and Kennedy4 as well as in meta-analyses.Reference Karg, Burmeister, Shedden and Sen5,Reference Risch, Herrell, Lehner, Liang, Eaves and Hoh6 Several environmental factors have been analysed in this respect, and among the most important factors is childhood trauma, which has a strong impact on MDD risk.Reference De Graaf, Bijl, Smit, Vollebergh and Spijker7-Reference Teicher and Samson10 Nevertheless, although some consistent evidence for interaction between childhood trauma and 5-HTTLPR was found, these G × E findings remain controversial.Reference Duncan and Keller1 The progress from a candidate gene to a hypothesis-free genome-wide approach is hampered by lack of statistical power and inconsistent assessment of environmental stressors across genome-wide association study (GWAS) cohorts.
Research on main genetic effects, on the other hand, has indicated that the risk of MDD is not merely increased by the effect of one or a few single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), but by polygenic variation.Reference Demirkan, Penninx, Hek, Wray, Amin and Aulchenko11,Reference Lubke, Hottenga, Walters, Laurin, de Geus and Willemsen12 One of the methods applied to point at these polygenic effects, first introduced for schizophrenia,Reference Purcell, Wray, Stone, Visscher, O'Donovan and Sullivan13 uses polygenic risk scores and was later applied to MDD.Reference Demirkan, Penninx, Hek, Wray, Amin and Aulchenko11 The polygenic risk scores are obtained after carrying out a GWAS in a discovery sample and then taking SNPs up to a certain threshold of significance, or even all SNPs, to predict MDD in an independent target sample. The contribution of these large numbers of SNPs are weighted by their effect size in a GWAS or meta-analysis. The effect of polygenic risk scores on MDD was repeatedly confirmed and explains up to 1-2% of variation.Reference Demirkan, Penninx, Hek, Wray, Amin and Aulchenko11,Reference Smoller, Craddock, Kendler, Lee, Neale and Nurnberger14,Reference Ripke, Wray, Lewis, Hamilton, Weissman and Breen15
Even though this has not yet been studied for MDD, it is likely that causal genetic variants for MDD are located throughout all of the genome, as has been found for other complex traits such as height and body mass index.Reference Yang, Manolio, Pasquale, Boerwinkle, Caporaso and Cunningham16 Also, SNPs contributing to pleiotropy between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are found dispersed throughout the genome.Reference Lee, Ripke, Neale, Faraone, Purcell and Perlis17 The finding that the risk of MDD is increased by polygenic variation suggests that research of interaction effects should also focus on polygenic information. With an expected abundance of causal variants for MDD, environmental conditions that increase genetic effects are more likely to be found when polygenic information is taken into account. When environmental conditions that increase genetic effects are found, individuals exposed to these conditions can be selected for future research to study the impact of single loci on MDD with increased power. Nevertheless, to the best of our knowledge, no research on G × E interaction in MDD has focused on polygenic information thus far.
The current study focused on polygenic information to test for G × E interaction in MDD, and examined whether polygenic risk scores interact with the presence of childhood trauma in a large and well-characterised sample from The Netherlands.
Method
Participants
The sample consisted of participants from the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA), which is an ongoing longitudinal cohort study of depressive and anxiety disorders, with individuals recruited from mental healthcare settings, general practices and the general population in the period from 2004 to 2007.Reference Penninx, Beekman, Smit, Zitman, Nolen and Spinhoven18 Participants with MDD in their lifetime (n = 1645) were diagnosed in a face-to-face interview with a trained clinical staff member following the DSM-IV-based Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI, version 2.1). Over half of these participants (n = 956) had severe MDD with remitted (more than one) episodes and/or chronic (longer than 2 years of) complaints, as assessed with the life chart, a calendar approach to calculate the percentage of time symptoms were present during 4 years prior to baseline and 2 years following baseline.Reference Penninx, Nolen, Lamers, Zitman, Smit and Spinhoven19 Controls (n = 340) were screened in a similar face-to-face CIDI interview and had no diagnosis of a depressive, dysthymic, anxiety or other psychiatric disorder in their lifetime. Participants were of North European ancestry and were excluded when they were not fluent in speaking Dutch or when they had another primary diagnosis, such as a psychotic, obsessive-compulsive, bipolar or severe substance use disorder. The NESDA study was approved by the institutional review board and all participants provided written informed consent.
Childhood trauma
Childhood trauma was assessed in a face-to-face interview with a trained clinical staff member with the Childhood Trauma Interview (CTI) from The Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study.Reference De Graaf, Bijl, Smit, Vollebergh and Spijker7 The CTI assesses the domains of emotional neglect, psychological abuse, physical abuse and sexual abuse before the age of 16, and yields a score ranging 0-8 by adding the frequencies of occurrence (0, absent; 1, once or sometimes; 2, regularly, often or very often). In the CTI the four domains are assessed by asking whether the traumatic event occurred (yes or no), and a subsequent question asking how often the event occurred. In the first question the traumatic events were specified as follows: emotional neglect as the lack of parental attention or support and ignorance of one’s problems and experiences; psychological abuse as being verbally abused, undeserved punishment, subordinated to siblings and being blackmailed; physical abuse as being kicked or hit with hands or an object, beaten up or physical abuse in any other way; and sexual abuse as being sexually approached against one’s will, meaning being touched or having to touch someone in a sexual way. The CTI is a well-established instrument - measurements of childhood trauma show a strong impact on depressive and anxiety disordersReference De Graaf, Bijl, Smit, Vollebergh and Spijker7,Reference Peyrot, Middeldorp, Jansen, Smit, de Geus and Hottenga20 as well as on structural and functional brain abnormalities.Reference van Harmelen, van Tol, van der Wee, Veltman, Aleman and Spinhoven21,Reference van Harmelen, van Tol, Demenescu, van der Wee, Veltman and Aleman22 The CTI also shows strong content validity when compared with the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ),Reference Bernstein, Stein, Newcomb, Walker, Pogge and Ahluvalia23 with Spearman’s rho correlation of 0.69 (P<0.001) in a subset of NESDA with both the CTI and CTQ assessed at different time points.
Genotyping and quality control
Methods for blood sampling and DNA extraction have been described previously.Reference Boomsma, Willemsen, Sullivan, Heutink, Meijer and Sondervan24 The manufacturer’s protocol was followed to genotype the autosomal SNPs on the Affymetrix 6.0 Human Genome-Wide SNP Array. With quality control, SNPs were excluded that: had probes that mapped badly against NCBI Build 37/UCSC hg19; had a minor allele frequency smaller than 1%; had a missing rate greater than 5%; deviated from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium with a P-value smaller than 0.001, thus leaving 498 592 SNPs to analyse. Participants were excluded when: they showed a contrast QC <0.4 (CQC, a quality metric from Affymetrix representing how well allele intensities separate into clusters); fell outside of the main cluster of a principal component reflecting a batch effect;Reference Abdellaoui, Hottenga, Knijff, Nivard, Xiao and Scheet25 had a missing rate greater than 5%; had excess genome-wide heterozygosity or inbreeding levels (F<–0.10 or >0.10); had genotypes with inconsistencies regarding reported gender; or had non-European/non-Dutch ancestry as indicated with principal component analysis.Reference Abdellaoui, Hottenga, Knijff, Nivard, Xiao and Scheet25
Polygenic risk scores
The polygenic risk scores were created based on the results from a large meta-analysis from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC)Reference Ripke, Wray, Lewis, Hamilton, Weissman and Breen15 excluding participants from the Dutch GWAS cohortReference Sullivan, de Geus, Willemsen, James, Smit and Zandbelt26 that included NESDA participants (thus yielding 7544 cases and 7754 controls in the discovery set). Risk scores were obtained following the method described by Purcell and colleaguesReference Purcell, Wray, Stone, Visscher, O'Donovan and Sullivan13 with the PLINK software run on Linux.Reference Purcell, Neale, Todd-Brown, Thomas, Ferreira and Bender27 From the meta-analysis, SNPs were selected that had an imputation INFO score >0.9 and minor allele frequency >0.02, and low linkage disequilibrium to each other (r 2<0.25 within 500 kb window, filtering for significance; PLINK-command –clump-p1 1 –clump-p2 1 –clump-r2 0.25 –clump-kb 500). The meta-analysis results of SNPs up to eight P-value thresholds (0.001; 0.01; 0.05; 0.1; 0.2; 0.3; 0.4; and 0.5) were selected to compute the polygenic risk scores in our sample; the numbers of SNPs thus included were 150, 1209, 5028, 8905, 16 081, 22 355, 28 018 and 32 870 respectively. The polygenic risk scores were standardised to a mean of zero and standard deviation of one to aid interpretation of results.
Statistical analyses
Participants with MDD were compared with controls with respect to age, gender, and their childhood trauma score (range 0-8) with t-tests for continuous variables and chi-squared tests for binary variables. The effect of polygenic risk scores on the childhood trauma score (i.e. gene-environment correlation) was tested with linear regression, because such an effect could potentially bias tests for interaction.Reference Purcell28 Two binary MDD outcomes were analysed as dependent variables: all participants with MDD v. controls (all MDD risk) and participants with severe MDD v. controls (severe MDD risk). The direct effects of polygenic risk scores (model 1) and the childhood trauma score (model 2) on MDD risks were assessed in separate logistic regression models. Subsequently, tests for interaction were performed with logistic regression to test for interaction as departure from multiplicativity (model 3) and, second, with analyses of relative excess risks due to interaction (RERI, model 4) to test for interaction as departure from additivity. The RERIs were computed with the method described by Knol and colleagues, as RERI = eβCT+βPRS+βPRS × CT-eβCT-eβPRS+1.Reference Knol, van der Tweel, Grobbee, Numans and Geerlings29 The RERI’s 95% confidence intervals were computed with bootstrapping with 10 000 iterations. The difference between interaction as departure from additivity and interaction as departure from multiplicativity is that the first represents a situation where the combined effect is larger than the sum of the individual effects of the polygenic risk score and childhood trauma, whereas the latter represents a situation where the combined effect is larger than the product of the individual effects. It has been argued that interaction as departure from additivity is more in line with biological interaction.Reference Knol, van der Tweel, Grobbee, Numans and Geerlings29
Nagelkerke’s R 2 were estimated to assess what proportion of variation in all MDD risk was explained by the polygenic risk scores (PRS) and childhood trauma independently, as well as their interaction PRS × childhood trauma. Therefore, several R 2 estimates were compared: between the model with only covariates and the model additionally including childhood trauma (R 2 of childhood trauma); between the model with covariates and childhood trauma and the model additionally including polygenic risk scores (R 2 of PRS); and between the model with covariates, childhood trauma and polygenic risk scores and the model additionally including the PRS × childhood trauma interaction (R 2 of PRS × childhood trauma). Nagelkerke’s R 2 may, however, be biased by a sample’s ascertainment when a disproportionate number of cases is selected from the population.Reference Lee, Goddard, Wray and Visscher30 Therefore, we also computed an alternative R 2 measure for the polygenic risk scores, which was recently proposed by Lee and colleagues.Reference Lee, Goddard, Wray and Visscher30 This R 2 measure is based on the liability scale, directly comparable to the heritability, and robust against ascertainment bias.Reference Lee, Goddard, Wray and Visscher30 Lee’s R 2 estimates in our sample were based on a Dutch lifetime prevalence of MDD of 18.7%.Reference De Graaf, Ten Have, Van Gool and Van Dorsselaer31
All analyses were corrected for age, gender and three ancestry-informative principal components to take possible population stratification into account, and the tests for interaction (models 3 and 4) included polygenic risk scores and the childhood trauma score as additional covariates. Effects were considered significant when P-values were <0.05 or when RERI 95% confidence intervals did not contain zero. All analyses were performed in R for Windows.32
Results
Participants with MDD (n = 1645) had a mean age comparable to that of the 340 healthy controls (42.2 years (s.d. = 2.5) and 43.3 years (s.d. = 14.5) respectively, P = 0.172), and were slightly more often female (68% and 57% respectively, P<0.001). The mean childhood trauma score was 1.75 (s.d. = 2.17, range 0-8), and mean scores of the four childhood trauma domains (range 0-2) were 0.76 (0.95) for emotional neglect (EN), 0.50 (0.84) for psychological abuse (PsA), 0.22 (0.57) for physical abuse (PhA), and 0.24 (0.52) for sexual abuse (SA). The scores of the domains were all correlated with each other with Pearson correlation coefficients of 0.61 for EN-PsA, 0.40 for EN-PhA, 0.24 for EN-SA, 0.55 for PsA-PhA, 0.23 for PsA-SA, and 0.26 for PhA-SA (all P<0.001). Childhood trauma occurred more often in participants with MDD than in healthy controls, with mean childhood trauma main scores of 1.99 (s.d. = 2.24) and 0.56 (s.d. = 1.29) respectively (P<0.001). None of the polygenic risk scores had an effect on childhood trauma, with beta-estimates around zero and all P-values well over 0.05, thus excluding gene-environment correlation and its potential bias on interaction tests (Table 1).
Polygenic risk score thresholds | Beta | P |
---|---|---|
P<0.001 | <0.01 | 0.991 |
P<0.01 | −0.01 | 0.769 |
P<0.05 | 0.02 | 0.733 |
P<0.1 | 0.01 | 0.847 |
P<0.2 | −0.01 | 0.883 |
P<0.3 | −0.02 | 0.754 |
P<0.4 | −0.01 | 0.904 |
P<0.5 | 0.01 | 0.907 |
a. Effects of polygenic risk scores on childhood trauma (i.e. gene-environment correlation) were estimated with linear regression including three principal components, age and gender as covariates.
The polygenic risk scores significantly predicted MDD risk (model 1), with slightly larger but comparable effects in predicting severe MDD risk compared with predicting all MDD risk (Table 2). The polygenic risk scores based on five of the eight studied thresholds were predictive in all MDD risk (thresholds 0.05; 0.1; 0.2; 0.3; 0.4) and the polygenic risk scores based on six thresholds were predictive in severe MDD risk (thresholds 0.05; 0.1; 0.2; 0.3; 0.4; 0.5). The score based on threshold P<0.05 had the largest effect on all MDD risk, with an odds ratio (OR) of 1.22 per standard deviation increase of the polygenic risk score (P = 0.001). The presence of childhood trauma also predicted MDD risk (model 2), again with slightly larger but comparable effects in predicting severe MDD risk compared with all MDD risk (with ORs of 1.64 (P<0.001) and 1.69 (P<0.001) respectively, per childhood trauma score unit increase (range 0-8); Table 2). Evidence was then found for interaction as departure from both multiplicativity (model 3, ORs>1) and additivity (model 4, RERIs>0), indicating that the effect of polygenic risk scores on MDD is increased in the presence of childhood trauma (Table 2). The largest interaction effect in predicting all MDD was found for the polygenic risk score based on threshold P<0.1 with an OR of 1.15 (P = 0.005); the largest interaction effect in predicting severe MDD was found for the polygenic risk score based on threshold P<0.3 with an OR of 1.16 (P = 0.005). These two interaction effects were visualised for their departure of multiplicativity by displaying the direct effects of the polygenic risk scores for three childhood trauma levels, with childhood trauma scores of 0-1; 2-3 and 4-8 respectively (Fig. 1). Figure 1 shows that the polygenic risk scores have limited impact in predicting MDD risk in individuals with no/low exposure to childhood trauma, but large impact in individuals with high exposure to childhood trauma.
Direct effectsFootnote a | PRS × childhood trauma interactionFootnote b | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PRS (model 1) | Childhood trauma (model 2) | Multiplicative (model 3) | Additive (model 4) | |||||
PRS thresholds | OR | P | OR | P | OR | P | RERI | 95% CI |
All major depressive disorderFootnote c | ||||||||
P<0.001 | 1.01 | 0.808 | 1.64 | <0.001 | 1.06 | 0.288 | 0.08 | −0.08 to 0.25 |
P<0.01 | 1.12 | 0.059 | 1.64 | <0.001 | 1.09 | 0.080 | 0.21 | 0.04 to 0.47 |
P<0.05 | 1.22 | 0.001 | 1.64 | <0.001 | 1.14 | 0.008 | 0.37 | 0.14 to 0.71 |
P<0.1 | 1.18 | 0.005 | 1.64 | <0.001 | 1.15 | 0.005 | 0.34 | 0.13 to 0.64 |
P<0.2 | 1.15 | 0.021 | 1.64 | <0.001 | 1.12 | 0.014 | 0.29 | 0.10 to 0.56 |
P<0.3 | 1.13 | 0.037 | 1.64 | <0.001 | 1.14 | 0.005 | 0.30 | 0.11 to 0.56 |
P<0.4 | 1.13 | 0.035 | 1.64 | <0.001 | 1.13 | 0.010 | 0.28 | 0.08 to 0.55 |
P<0.5 | 1.11 | 0.081 | 1.64 | <0.001 | 1.12 | 0.018 | 0.24 | 0.04 to 0.50 |
Severe major depressive disorderFootnote d | ||||||||
P<0.001 | 1.02 | 0.805 | 1.69 | <0.001 | 1.07 | 0.185 | 0.09 | −0.08 to 0.28 |
P<0.01 | 1.11 | 0.116 | 1.69 | <0.001 | 1.11 | 0.054 | 0.21 | 0.02 to 0.46 |
P<0.05 | 1.22 | 0.002 | 1.69 | <0.001 | 1.14 | 0.013 | 0.37 | 0.14 to 0.72 |
P<0.1 | 1.2 | 0.005 | 1.69 | <0.001 | 1.14 | 0.008 | 0.36 | 0.13 to 0.69 |
P<0.2 | 1.17 | 0.016 | 1.69 | <0.001 | 1.13 | 0.017 | 0.33 | 0.10 to 0.67 |
P<0.3 | 1.17 | 0.017 | 1.69 | <0.001 | 1.16 | 0.005 | 0.36 | 0.13 to 0.69 |
P<0.4 | 1.17 | 0.016 | 1.69 | <0.001 | 1.14 | 0.009 | 0.34 | 0.11 to 0.70 |
P<0.5 | 1.15 | 0.032 | 1.69 | <0.001 | 1.14 | 0.014 | 0.30 | 0.07 to 0.63 |
OR, odds ratio.
a. Direct effects of the PRSs, childhood trauma and their interaction effects were estimated in four separate logistic regression models. The effects of the PRS (model 1) and childhood trauma (model 2) were estimated in models with age, gender and three principal components as covariates.
b. The interaction effects were estimated in a model additionally including PRS and childhood trauma as covariates (model 3 and model 4). The relative excess risks due to interaction (RERI) represent tests for interaction as departure from additivity and were computed by eβCT+βPRS+βPRSxCT-eβCT-eβPRS+1.
c. 1645 cases and 340 controls.
d. 956 cases and 340 controls.
The impact of the four separate childhood trauma domains on the interaction effects were compared by conducting analyses of each domain separately in predicting all MDD risk. The estimates of interaction thus found were in the same direction for all domains (OR>1), but appeared more significant for the domains of emotional neglect and psychological abuse, than for the domains of physical abuse and sexual abuse (Table 3). This difference in significance is possibly due to the lower frequency of occurrence of physical abuse and sexual abuse.
Emotional neglect (EN) | Psychological abuse (PsA) | Physical abuse (PhA) | Sexual abuse (SA) | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EN | PRS×EN | PsA | PRS×PsA | PhA | PRS×PhA | SA | PRS×SA | |||||||||
PRS thresholds | OR | P | OR | P | OR | P | OR | P | OR | P | OR | P | OR | P | OR | P |
P<0.001 | 2.57 | <.001 | 1.10 | 0.307 | 2.40 | <.001 | 1.03 | 0.809 | 2.90 | <.001 | 1.24 | 0.297 | 2.19 | <.001 | 1.12 | 0.503 |
P<0.01 | 2.57 | <.001 | 1.15 | 0.130 | 2.40 | <.001 | 1.16 | 0.216 | 2.90 | <.001 | 1.30 | 0.215 | 2.19 | <.001 | 1.05 | 0.785 |
P<0.05 | 2.57 | <.001 | 1.15 | 0.128 | 2.40 | <.001 | 1.37 | 0.006 | 2.90 | <.001 | 1.42 | 0.081 | 2.19 | <.001 | 1.08 | 0.653 |
P<0.1 | 2.57 | <.001 | 1.18 | 0.069 | 2.40 | <.001 | 1.36 | 0.007 | 2.90 | <.001 | 1.36 | 0.137 | 2.19 | <.001 | 1.11 | 0.508 |
P<0.2 | 2.57 | <.001 | 1.21 | 0.032 | 2.40 | <.001 | 1.29 | 0.025 | 2.90 | <.001 | 1.23 | 0.288 | 2.19 | <.001 | 1.10 | 0.561 |
P<0.3 | 2.57 | <.001 | 1.22 | 0.027 | 2.40 | <.001 | 1.36 | 0.007 | 2.90 | <.001 | 1.18 | 0.381 | 2.19 | <.001 | 1.12 | 0.460 |
P<0.4 | 2.57 | <.001 | 1.21 | 0.035 | 2.40 | <.001 | 1.32 | 0.016 | 2.90 | <.001 | 1.11 | 0.577 | 2.19 | <.001 | 1.14 | 0.393 |
P<0.5 | 2.57 | <.001 | 1.19 | 0.056 | 2.40 | <.001 | 1.31 | 0.018 | 2.90 | <.001 | 1.10 | 0.609 | 2.19 | <.001 | 1.16 | 0.356 |
OR, odds ratio.
a. Four childhood trauma domains (ranging from 0 to 2) were tested for their direct effects and interaction effects with polygenic risk scores on all major depressive disorder risk, using logistic regression analyses adjusted for age, gender and three principal components. The main effects of the PRSs are displayed in Table 2 (model 1).
Most variation in all MDD risk was explained by childhood trauma (∼13%), but the proportions explained by the polygenic risk scores (in addition to the variation explained by childhood trauma) and their interaction effects (in addition to the variation explained by childhood trauma and the polygenic risk score) were of comparable magnitude (∼0.5%, Table 4). Note that Lee’s R 2 estimates were comparable to Nagelkerke’s R 2 estimates for the polygenic risk scores, which indicates that ascertainment bias did not largely impact our results (Table 4).
Nagelkerke’s R 2,Footnote a % | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
PRS thresholds | Childhood trauma | PRS | PRS × childhood trauma | Lee’s R 2,Footnote b PRS |
P<0.001 | 12.68 | <0.00 | 0.09 | 0.02 |
P<0.01 | 12.68 | 0.30 | 0.24 | 0.41 |
P<0.05 | 12.68 | 0.90 | 0.53 | 1.26 |
P<0.1 | 12.68 | 0.66 | 0.60 | 0.94 |
P<0.2 | 12.68 | 0.49 | 0.46 | 0.64 |
P<0.3 | 12.68 | 0.40 | 0.59 | 0.54 |
P<0.4 | 12.68 | 0.40 | 0.49 | 0.56 |
P<0.5 | 12.68 | 0.26 | 0.42 | 0.39 |
a. To estimate proportions of variation in risk on all major depressive disorder explained by childhood trauma, PRS and their interaction (PRS × childhood trauma), Nagelkerke’s R 2 were compared: between the model with only covariates and the model additionally including childhood trauma (R 2 of childhood trauma); between the model with covariates and childhood trauma and the model additionally including PRS (R 2 of PRS); and between the model with covariates, childhood trauma and PRS and the model additionally including the interaction PRS × childhood trauma (R 2 of PRS × childhood trauma). Age, gender and three principal components were included as covariates.
b. Lee’s proposed estimate of R 2 was computedReference Lee, Goddard, Wray and Visscher30 using a Dutch lifetime prevalence of major depressive disorder of 18.7%.Reference De Graaf, Ten Have, Van Gool and Van Dorsselaer31
Discussion
Main findings
This is the first study that focuses on polygenic risk scores to test for G × E interaction in MDD. Within our sample we found increased effects of polygenic risk scores on MDD in the presence of childhood trauma, with evidence for interaction as departure from both multiplicativity and additivity. These interaction effects were comparable in predicting all MDD risk and severe (chronic or recurrent) MDD risk, although effects were slightly larger in the latter. The interaction effects were driven by all of the four domains included in the childhood trauma measure (emotional neglect, psychological abuse, physical abuse and sexual abuse). We found that the proportion of variation in all MDD risk explained by the interaction effects was comparable to the proportion explained by the polygenic risk scores (both ∼ 0.5%).
Thus far, polygenic information has not been taken into account in research on G × E interaction in MDD, but there has been ongoing research for interaction with candidate genes. The motivation for research on G × E interaction in MDD is found in its contribution to understanding the complex aetiology of MDD,Reference Manolio, Collins, Cox, Goldstein, Hindorff and Hunter33 and its possibility to select environmental conditions with increased genetic effects. Nevertheless, research on candidate genes has led to rather contradictory results: in research on the well-known serotonin transporter gene (5-HTTLPR) even meta-analyses differ in their conclusions,Reference Karg, Burmeister, Shedden and Sen5,Reference Risch, Herrell, Lehner, Liang, Eaves and Hoh6,Reference Munafò, Durrant, Lewis and Flint34 with concerns about publications bias.Reference Duncan and Keller1 However, because genetic effects on MDD are polygenic in nature,Reference Demirkan, Penninx, Hek, Wray, Amin and Aulchenko11,Reference Lubke, Hottenga, Walters, Laurin, de Geus and Willemsen12 we argued that G × E interaction should be tested with polygenic information.
The interaction effect thus found within our sample between polygenic risk scores and childhood trauma in MDD has two implications. The first is that polygenic risk scores have increased effects in the presence of childhood trauma (as illustrated in Fig. 1), which indicates that research on direct genetic effects potentially gains power by focusing on individuals exposed to childhood trauma. Therefore, if numbers would allow, it would be very useful to perform a GWAS within, for example, the collaborative PGCReference Ripke, Wray, Lewis, Hamilton, Weissman and Breen15 in individuals who experienced childhood trauma. Because interaction effects are symmetrical, we could, however, also have illustrated that childhood trauma has more impact in individuals with high polygenic risk scores. Thus, the second implication is that individuals with high polygenic risk scores are more vulnerable for the effects of childhood trauma, which has potential clinical relevance, for example in profiling of MDD, but also in possible future prevention programmes. When replicated in independent samples, the interaction effect found might add a modest but important piece to the complex puzzle of MDD’s aetiology.
The direct effects of the polygenic risk scores and childhood trauma in predicting MDD risk in our sample are in line with previous findings. The proportion of variation in MDD explained by the polygenic risk scores (R 2 ∼0.5%) was in agreement with the findings of Demirkan et al Reference Demirkan, Penninx, Hek, Wray, Amin and Aulchenko11 and the PGC.Reference Ripke, Wray, Lewis, Hamilton, Weissman and Breen15 Although Nagelkerke’s R 2 could have suffered from ascertainment bias because of the large proportion of participants with MDD in our sample, its estimates were of the same magnitude as Lee’s estimates of R 2, indicating that ascertainment did not largely affect our results.Reference Lee, Goddard, Wray and Visscher30 The choice of the SNP P-value cut-off in the discovery sample tends to be arbitrary, which is why we presented results for eight different cut-offs in this study, and results were comparable for cut-offs larger than 0.05. In general, we anticipate that lower cut-offs are preferable over higher cut-offs when the discovery sample size increases and SNP effects can be found with more certainty. The impact of childhood trauma in predicting MDD risk in our sample is also in line with studies by MacMillan et al Reference MacMillan, Fleming, Streiner, Lin, Boyle and Jamieson9 and De Graaf et al.Reference De Graaf, Bijl, Smit, Vollebergh and Spijker7 Furthermore, evidence for interaction was found as departure from both multiplicativity and additivity, the latter of which has been argued to be more in line with biological interaction.Reference Knol, van der Tweel, Grobbee, Numans and Geerlings29,Reference Uher, Caspi, Houts, Sugden, Williams and Poulton35
The impact of polygenic risk scores on MDD could have been studied in several environmental conditions, but we hypothesised that the presence of childhood trauma is a likely candidate. The presence of childhood trauma showed most consistent results in previous research on interaction with candidate genes,Reference Karg, Burmeister, Shedden and Sen5 and it is a severe form of stress with a large and life-long impact, resulting in a large main effect on MDD prevalence.Reference Hovens, Wiersma, Giltay, van Oppen, Spinhoven and Penninx8,Reference Teicher and Samson10 Furthermore, childhood trauma generally occurs before the onset of MDD (in our sample 84.7% of participants with MDD had their first episode after age 16), thereby largely excluding the potential source of bias from reciprocal causation, i.e. when MDD results in environmental stress.Reference Middeldorp, Cath, Beem, Willemsen and Boomsma36 In our study, childhood trauma was assessed with the CTI, which is a well-established instrument that has shown to predict onset of depressive and anxiety disordersReference De Graaf, Bijl, Smit, Vollebergh and Spijker7,Reference Peyrot, Middeldorp, Jansen, Smit, de Geus and Hottenga20 as well as an enduring impact on structural and functional brain abnormalities.Reference van Harmelen, van Tol, van der Wee, Veltman, Aleman and Spinhoven21,Reference van Harmelen, van Tol, Demenescu, van der Wee, Veltman and Aleman22 Our finding that childhood trauma increases the effects of polygenic risk scores on MDD fits with a recent review of Teicher & Samson, which indicates that patients with MDD and childhood trauma have more severe mood, neuro-vegetative and endogenous symptoms, and more comorbidities and psychotic features than patients with MDD without childhood trauma.Reference Teicher and Samson10
The approach applied in this study, to test for G × E interaction with polygenic risk scores, has both advantages and disadvantages. This is the first study to apply this approach to MDD, but Meyers and colleagues have previously applied it to smoking behaviour. They observed interaction effects on smoking behaviour between polygenic risk scores for smoking and the number of traumatic events experienced as well as for polygenic risk scores and neighbourhood social cohesion (effective n = 399).Reference Meyers, Cerda, Galea, Keyes, Aiello and Uddin37 An advantage of the polygenic risk scores approach is that polygenic risk scores are based on genome-wide SNP data, but result in a one-dimensional summary measure, with corresponding requirements of significance (P<0.05). Consequently, the sample size of the target sample can be much smaller than in GWAS testing SNPs independently. A disadvantage is, however, that particular aspects of the multidimensional polygenic information are lost, which could lead to biased results, for example when certain SNPs show increased effects on MDD in the presence of childhood trauma, whereas other SNPs show decreased effects on MDD in the presence of childhood trauma. If this hypothetical situation would occur, both interaction effects would be levelled out in tests with the one-dimensional polygenic risk scores summary measure. Nevertheless, at the present time sample sizes are insufficient to examine the impact of many SNPs independently in G × E studies and, therefore, studying polygenic risk scores seems an elegant approach for testing the general hypothesis of the existence of G × E interaction.
Strengths and limitations
Our study has several strengths. First, it was based on DSM-IV diagnoses of MDD, which ensures we studied participants with clinically relevant MDD. Second, controls were carefully screened for any lifetime psychiatric diagnosis. Third, childhood trauma was assessed in a face-to-face interview by specially trained clinical staff. Fourth, polygenic risk scores were based on a large and independent discovery sample, which adds to the accuracy of the polygenic risk scores. However, there are also some limitations, including potential recall bias of childhood trauma influenced by the mood of participants with MDD. The number of controls in our sample was rather limited, but we carefully checked for ascertainment bias and found none. Even though controls were carefully screened for MDD, they could potentially develop MDD later in life, especially because MDD has a high prevalence of approximately 15-20%.Reference De Graaf, Ten Have, Van Gool and Van Dorsselaer31
Clinical implications
We show that the effect of polygenic risk scores on MDD is increased in the presence of childhood trauma in our sample. Our finding implicates that power in research on direct genetic effects is larger in the presence of childhood trauma, but it also implicates that individuals with high polygenic risk scores form a potential group for MDD prevention, because of their increased vulnerability to the depressogenic effects of childhood trauma. Future research should be conducted to replicate our finding, especially in the light of the inconclusive findings in research on interaction in MDD thus far. In addition, future research could also be designed to test interaction with polygenic information applying different techniques. A possible technique to apply could be genome-wide complex trait analyses (GCTA) to test for interaction with the genetic relationship matrix.Reference Yang, Lee, Goddard and Visscher38 The present study was underpowered to conduct such analyses,Reference Visscher, Hemani, Vinkhuyzen, Chen, Lee and Wray39 but future efforts combining data from several independent GWAS cohorts could potentially reach power to test for interaction with GCTA. Further research is required, but our results suggest that G × E interaction could play a considerable role in the polygenic effects on MDD.
Funding
The Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA) was funded by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (Geestkracht program grant ); the Center for Medical Systems Biology (CMSB, NWO Genomics), Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure (BBMRI-NL), VU University’s EMGO Institute for Health and Care Research and Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam, ENGAGE (). Genotyping was funded by the US National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) () as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. The Psychiatric Genomics Consortium was funded by NIMH grants and . A.A. and W.J.P. were supported by CSMB/Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam. Statistical analyses were partly carried out on the Genetic Cluster Computer (www.geneticcluster.org), which is financially supported by the Netherlands Scientific Organization (), the Dutch Brain Foundation, and the Department of Psychology and Education of the VU University Amsterdam.
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