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Every Night and Every Morn: Effect of Variation in CLOCK Gene on Depression Depends on Exposure to Early and Recent Stress

The role of circadian dysregulation is increasingly acknowledged in the background of depressive symptoms, and is also a promising treatment target. Similarly, stress shows a complex relationship with the circadian system. The CLOCK gene, encoding a key element in circadian regulation has been impli...

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Autores principales: Gyorik, Dorka, Eszlari, Nora, Gal, Zsofia, Torok, Dora, Baksa, Daniel, Kristof, Zsuliet, Sutori, Sara, Petschner, Peter, Juhasz, Gabriella, Bagdy, Gyorgy, Gonda, Xenia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8428175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34512413
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2021.687487
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author Gyorik, Dorka
Eszlari, Nora
Gal, Zsofia
Torok, Dora
Baksa, Daniel
Kristof, Zsuliet
Sutori, Sara
Petschner, Peter
Juhasz, Gabriella
Bagdy, Gyorgy
Gonda, Xenia
author_facet Gyorik, Dorka
Eszlari, Nora
Gal, Zsofia
Torok, Dora
Baksa, Daniel
Kristof, Zsuliet
Sutori, Sara
Petschner, Peter
Juhasz, Gabriella
Bagdy, Gyorgy
Gonda, Xenia
author_sort Gyorik, Dorka
collection PubMed
description The role of circadian dysregulation is increasingly acknowledged in the background of depressive symptoms, and is also a promising treatment target. Similarly, stress shows a complex relationship with the circadian system. The CLOCK gene, encoding a key element in circadian regulation has been implicated in previous candidate variant studies in depression with contradictory findings, and only a few such studies considered the interacting effects of stress. We investigated the effect of CLOCK variation with a linkage-disequilibrium-based clumping method, in interaction with childhood adversities and recent negative life events, on two phenotypes of depression, lifetime depression and current depressive symptoms in a general population sample. Methods: Participants in NewMood study completed questionnaires assessing childhood adversities and recent negative life events, the Brief Symptom Inventory to assess current depressive symptoms, provided data on lifetime depression, and were genotyped for 1054 SNPs in the CLOCK gene, 370 of which survived quality control and were entered into linear and logistic regression models with current depressive symptoms and lifetime depression as the outcome variable, and childhood adversities or recent life events as interaction variables followed by a linkage disequilibrium-based clumping process to identify clumps of SNPs with a significant main or interaction effect. Results: No significant clumps with a main effect were found. In interaction with recent life events a significant clump containing 94 SNPs with top SNP rs6825994 for dominant and rs6850524 for additive models on current depression was identified, while in interaction with childhood adversities on current depressive symptoms, two clumps, both containing 9 SNPs were found with top SNPs rs6828454 and rs711533. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that CLOCK contributes to depressive symptoms, but via mediating the effects of early adversities and recent stressors. Given the increasing burden on circadian rhythmicity in the modern lifestyle and our expanding insight into the contribution of circadian disruption in depression especially as a possible mediator of stress, our results may pave the way for identifying those who would be at an increased risk for depressogenic effects of circadian dysregulation in association with stress as well as new molecular targets for intervention in stress-related psychopathologies in mood disorders.
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spelling pubmed-84281752021-09-10 Every Night and Every Morn: Effect of Variation in CLOCK Gene on Depression Depends on Exposure to Early and Recent Stress Gyorik, Dorka Eszlari, Nora Gal, Zsofia Torok, Dora Baksa, Daniel Kristof, Zsuliet Sutori, Sara Petschner, Peter Juhasz, Gabriella Bagdy, Gyorgy Gonda, Xenia Front Psychiatry Psychiatry The role of circadian dysregulation is increasingly acknowledged in the background of depressive symptoms, and is also a promising treatment target. Similarly, stress shows a complex relationship with the circadian system. The CLOCK gene, encoding a key element in circadian regulation has been implicated in previous candidate variant studies in depression with contradictory findings, and only a few such studies considered the interacting effects of stress. We investigated the effect of CLOCK variation with a linkage-disequilibrium-based clumping method, in interaction with childhood adversities and recent negative life events, on two phenotypes of depression, lifetime depression and current depressive symptoms in a general population sample. Methods: Participants in NewMood study completed questionnaires assessing childhood adversities and recent negative life events, the Brief Symptom Inventory to assess current depressive symptoms, provided data on lifetime depression, and were genotyped for 1054 SNPs in the CLOCK gene, 370 of which survived quality control and were entered into linear and logistic regression models with current depressive symptoms and lifetime depression as the outcome variable, and childhood adversities or recent life events as interaction variables followed by a linkage disequilibrium-based clumping process to identify clumps of SNPs with a significant main or interaction effect. Results: No significant clumps with a main effect were found. In interaction with recent life events a significant clump containing 94 SNPs with top SNP rs6825994 for dominant and rs6850524 for additive models on current depression was identified, while in interaction with childhood adversities on current depressive symptoms, two clumps, both containing 9 SNPs were found with top SNPs rs6828454 and rs711533. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that CLOCK contributes to depressive symptoms, but via mediating the effects of early adversities and recent stressors. Given the increasing burden on circadian rhythmicity in the modern lifestyle and our expanding insight into the contribution of circadian disruption in depression especially as a possible mediator of stress, our results may pave the way for identifying those who would be at an increased risk for depressogenic effects of circadian dysregulation in association with stress as well as new molecular targets for intervention in stress-related psychopathologies in mood disorders. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8428175/ /pubmed/34512413 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2021.687487 Text en Copyright © 2021 Gyorik, Eszlari, Gal, Torok, Baksa, Kristof, Sutori, Petschner, Juhasz, Bagdy and Gonda. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychiatry
Gyorik, Dorka
Eszlari, Nora
Gal, Zsofia
Torok, Dora
Baksa, Daniel
Kristof, Zsuliet
Sutori, Sara
Petschner, Peter
Juhasz, Gabriella
Bagdy, Gyorgy
Gonda, Xenia
Every Night and Every Morn: Effect of Variation in CLOCK Gene on Depression Depends on Exposure to Early and Recent Stress
title Every Night and Every Morn: Effect of Variation in CLOCK Gene on Depression Depends on Exposure to Early and Recent Stress
title_full Every Night and Every Morn: Effect of Variation in CLOCK Gene on Depression Depends on Exposure to Early and Recent Stress
title_fullStr Every Night and Every Morn: Effect of Variation in CLOCK Gene on Depression Depends on Exposure to Early and Recent Stress
title_full_unstemmed Every Night and Every Morn: Effect of Variation in CLOCK Gene on Depression Depends on Exposure to Early and Recent Stress
title_short Every Night and Every Morn: Effect of Variation in CLOCK Gene on Depression Depends on Exposure to Early and Recent Stress
title_sort every night and every morn: effect of variation in clock gene on depression depends on exposure to early and recent stress
topic Psychiatry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8428175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34512413
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2021.687487
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