A methylome-wide association study of major depression with out-of-sample case-control classification and trans-ancestry comparison

Publication type

Journal Article

Series Number

Authors

Publication date

October 28, 2023

Summary:

Major Depression (MD) is a leading cause of global disease burden, and both experimental and population-based studies suggest that differences in DNA methylation (DNAm) may be associated with the condition. However, previous DNAm studies have not so far been widely replicated, suggesting a need for larger meta-analysis studies. In the present study, the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium Major Depressive Disorder working group conducted a meta-analysis of methylome-wide association analysis (MWAS) for life-time MD across 18 studies of 24,754 European-ancestry participants (5,443 MD cases) and an East Asian sample (243 cases, 1846 controls). We identified fifteen CpG sites associated with lifetime MD with methylome-wide significance (p < 6.42×10-8). Top CpG effect sizes in European ancestries were positively correlated with those from an independent East Asian MWAS (r = 0.482 and p = 0.068 for significant CpG sites, r = 0.261 and p = 0.009 for the top 100 CpG sites). Methylation score (MS) created using the MWAS summary statistics was significantly associated with MD status in an out-of-sample classification analysis (β = 0.122, p = 0.005, AUC = 0.53). MS was also associated with five inflammatory markers, with the strongest association found with Tumor Necrosis Factor Beta (β=-0.154, p=1.5×10-5). Mendelian randomisation (MR) analysis demonstrated that 23 CpG sites were potentially causally associated with MD and six of those were replicated in an independent mQTL dataset (Wald’s ratio test, absolute β ranged from 0.056 to 0.932, p ranged from 7×10-3 to 4.58×10-6). CpG sites located in the Major Histocompatibility complex (MHC) region showed the strongest evidence from MR analysis of being associated with MD. Our study provides evidence that variations in DNA methylation are associated with MD, and further evidence supporting involvement of the immune system. Larger sample sizes in diverse ancestries are likely to reveal replicable associations to improve mechanistic inferences with the potential to inform molecular target identification.

Published in

medRxiv

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.27.23297630

Subjects

Notes

Open Access

The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.

#568002


Related Publications

  • A methylome-wide association study of major depression with out-of-sample case–control classification and trans-ancestry comparison

    1. Xueyi Shen
    2. Miruna Barbu
    3. Doretta Caramaschi
    4. Ryan Arathimos
    5. Darina Czamara
    6. Friederike S. David
    7. Anna Dearman
    8. Evelyn Dilkes
    9. Marisol Herrera-Rivero
    10. Floris Huider
    11. Luise Kühn
    12. Kuan-Chen Lu
    13. Teemu Palviainen
    14. Alicia M. Schowe
    15. Gemma Shireby
    16. Antoine Weihs
    17. Chloe C.Y. Wong
    18. Eleanor Davyson
    19. Hannah Casey
    20. Mark J. Adams
    21. Antje-Kathrin Allgaier
    22. Michael Barber
    23. Joe Burrage
    24. Avshalom Caspi
    25. Ricardo Costeira
    26. Erin C. Dunn
    27. Lisa Feldmann
    28. Josef Frank
    29. Franz J. Freisleder
    30. Danni A. Gadd
    31. Ellen Greimel
    32. Eilis Hannon
    33. Sarah E. Harris
    34. Georg Homuth
    35. David M. Howard
    36. Stella Iurato
    37. Tellervo Korhonen
    38. Tzu-Pin Lu
    39. Nicholas G. Martin
    40. Jade Martins
    41. Edel McDermott
    42. Susanne Meinert
    43. Pau Navarro
    44. Miina Ollikainen
    45. Verena Pehl
    46. Charlotte Piechaczek
    47. Aline D. Scherff
    48. Frederike Stein
    49. Fabian Streit
    50. Alexander Teumer
    51. Henry Völzke
    52. Jenny van Dongen
    53. Rosie M. Walker
    54. Natan Yusupov
    55. Louise Arseneault
    56. Jordana T. Bell
    57. Klaus Berger
    58. Elisabeth Binder
    59. Dorret I. Boomsma
    60. Simon R. Cox
    61. Udo Dannlowski
    62. Kathryn L. Evans
    63. Helen L. Fisher
    64. Andreas J. Forstner
    65. Hans J. Grabe
    66. Jaakko Kaprio
    67. Tilo Kircher
    68. Johannes Kopf-Beck
    69. Meena Kumari
    70. Po-Hsiu Kuo
    71. Qingqin S. Li
    72. Terrie E. Moffitt
    73. Hugh Mulcahy
    74. Therese M. Murphy
    75. Gerd Schulte-Körne
    76. Jonathan Mill
    77. Cathryn M. Lewis
    78. Naomi R. Wray
    79. Andrew M. McIntosh

    Journal Article
    October 1, 2025

News

Latest findings, new research

Publications search

Search all research by subject and author

Podcasts

Researchers discuss their findings and what they mean for society

Projects

Background and context, methods and data, aims and outputs

Events

Conferences, seminars and workshops

Survey methodology

Specialist research, practice and study

Taking the long view

ISER's annual report

Themes

Key research themes and areas of interest