Polygenic phenotypic plasticity moderates the effects of severe childhood abuse on depressive symptom severity in adulthood: a 5-year prospective cohort study

2017 
OBJECTIVE: To test the phenotypic plasticity framework using a polygenic approach in a prospective depression cohort of primary care attendees with and without histories of severe childhood abuse. METHODS: Depressive symptoms were assessed at baseline and annually for five years post-baseline using the Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) among 288 adult primary care attendees. Twelve polymorphisms in nine genes were genotyped and polygenic phenotypic plasticity allelic load (PAL) calculated. Linear mixed models assessed differences in depressive symptom severity over the five-year follow-up period by PAL and history of severe childhood abuse. RESULTS: A higher PAL conferred greater depressive symptom severity among those with a history of severe childhood abuse but conferred significantly lower symptom severity among those without this history. Importantly, this interaction withstood adjustments for important covariates (e.g. antidepressant use, comorbid anxiety) and was stable over the five-years of observation. CONCLUSIONS: Aligned with the phenotypic plasticity framework, depressive symptom severity was dependent on the interaction between PAL and history of severe childhood abuse in a "for better and for worse" manner. Measures of polygenic phenotypic plasticity, such as ours, may serve as a trait marker of sensitivity to negative and potentially positive environmental influences. Language: en
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