No Support for Historical Candidate Gene or Candidate Gene-by-Interaction Hypotheses for Major Depression Across Multiple Large Samples
United States Customs and Border Protection
Abstract
Interest in candidate gene and candidate gene-by-environment interaction hypotheses regarding major depressive disorder remains strong despite controversy surrounding the validity of previous findings. In response to this controversy, the present investigation empirically identified 18 candidate genes for depression that have been studied 10 or more times and examined evidence for their relevance to depression phenotypes.
Utilizing data from large population-based and case-control samples (Ns ranging from 62,138 to 443,264 across subsamples), the authors conducted a series of preregistered analyses examining candidate gene polymorphism main effects, polymorphism-by-environment interactions, and gene-level effects across a number of operational definitions of depression (e.g., lifetime diagnosis, current severity, episode recurrence) and environmental moderators (e.g., sexual or physical abuse during childhood, socioeconomic adversity).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 70.35
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
7- RBRichard BorderCorresponding
United States Customs and Border Protection
- ECEmma C. Johnson
United States Customs and Border Protection
- LMLuke M. Evans
United States Customs and Border Protection
- ASAndrew Smolen
United States Customs and Border Protection
- NBNoah Berley
United States Customs and Border Protection
Topics & keywords
- Candidate gene
- Psychology
- Population stratification
- Genetics
- Population
- Depression (economics)
- Moderation
- Gene