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The association of FKBP5 gene methylation, adolescents’ sex, and depressive symptoms among Chinese adolescents: a nested case-control study
by
Lai, Wenjian
, Li, Wenyan
, McIntyre, Roger S.
, Guo, Lan
, Lu, Ciyong
, Wang, Wanxin
, Zhu, Liwan
, Shi, Jingman
, Li, Xiuwen
, Teopiz, Kayla M.
in
Adolescence
/ Adolescent
/ Adolescents
/ Adult
/ Biomarkers
/ Brain research
/ Case-Control Studies
/ Child & adolescent psychiatry
/ Child development
/ China
/ CpG islands
/ Depression - genetics
/ Depressive symptoms
/ DNA Methylation
/ Environmental factors
/ Epigenetics
/ Female
/ FKBP5 DNA methylation
/ Gender differences
/ Gene expression
/ Genetic testing
/ Humans
/ Longitudinal Studies
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental depression
/ Mental disorders
/ Nested case-control study
/ Psychiatry
/ Psychotherapy
/ RNA polymerase
/ Sex differences
/ Social interactions
/ Social-environmental factors
/ Stress
/ Student retention
/ Tacrolimus
/ Tacrolimus-binding protein
/ Teenagers
2022
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The association of FKBP5 gene methylation, adolescents’ sex, and depressive symptoms among Chinese adolescents: a nested case-control study
by
Lai, Wenjian
, Li, Wenyan
, McIntyre, Roger S.
, Guo, Lan
, Lu, Ciyong
, Wang, Wanxin
, Zhu, Liwan
, Shi, Jingman
, Li, Xiuwen
, Teopiz, Kayla M.
in
Adolescence
/ Adolescent
/ Adolescents
/ Adult
/ Biomarkers
/ Brain research
/ Case-Control Studies
/ Child & adolescent psychiatry
/ Child development
/ China
/ CpG islands
/ Depression - genetics
/ Depressive symptoms
/ DNA Methylation
/ Environmental factors
/ Epigenetics
/ Female
/ FKBP5 DNA methylation
/ Gender differences
/ Gene expression
/ Genetic testing
/ Humans
/ Longitudinal Studies
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental depression
/ Mental disorders
/ Nested case-control study
/ Psychiatry
/ Psychotherapy
/ RNA polymerase
/ Sex differences
/ Social interactions
/ Social-environmental factors
/ Stress
/ Student retention
/ Tacrolimus
/ Tacrolimus-binding protein
/ Teenagers
2022
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The association of FKBP5 gene methylation, adolescents’ sex, and depressive symptoms among Chinese adolescents: a nested case-control study
by
Lai, Wenjian
, Li, Wenyan
, McIntyre, Roger S.
, Guo, Lan
, Lu, Ciyong
, Wang, Wanxin
, Zhu, Liwan
, Shi, Jingman
, Li, Xiuwen
, Teopiz, Kayla M.
in
Adolescence
/ Adolescent
/ Adolescents
/ Adult
/ Biomarkers
/ Brain research
/ Case-Control Studies
/ Child & adolescent psychiatry
/ Child development
/ China
/ CpG islands
/ Depression - genetics
/ Depressive symptoms
/ DNA Methylation
/ Environmental factors
/ Epigenetics
/ Female
/ FKBP5 DNA methylation
/ Gender differences
/ Gene expression
/ Genetic testing
/ Humans
/ Longitudinal Studies
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental depression
/ Mental disorders
/ Nested case-control study
/ Psychiatry
/ Psychotherapy
/ RNA polymerase
/ Sex differences
/ Social interactions
/ Social-environmental factors
/ Stress
/ Student retention
/ Tacrolimus
/ Tacrolimus-binding protein
/ Teenagers
2022
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The association of FKBP5 gene methylation, adolescents’ sex, and depressive symptoms among Chinese adolescents: a nested case-control study
Journal Article
The association of FKBP5 gene methylation, adolescents’ sex, and depressive symptoms among Chinese adolescents: a nested case-control study
2022
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Overview
Background
Depressive symptoms among adolescents are a serious health concern around the world. Altered DNA methylation in the FK506 binding protein 5 (
FKBP5
) gene has been reported to regulate stress response, which has been reported to be closely associated with depressive symptoms. However, most of the contributing studies have been conducted among adults and relatively few studies have considered the effect of disparate social influences and sex differences on the DNA methylation of
FKBP5
in persons with depressive symptoms. The present study aimed to test the associations of
FKBP5
DNA methylation and depressive symptoms among adolescents and explore possible sex differences in the foregoing associations.
Methods
This study was conducted using a nested case-control design within a longitudinal cohort study from January 2019 to December 2019. Adolescents aged 12 to 17 years from 69 classes in 10 public high schools located in Guangdong province of China participated in this research. Students with persistent depressive symptoms that reported having depressive symptoms at both baseline and follow-up were treated as the case group, and those without depressive symptoms were randomly selected as the control group. Our study finally included 87 cases and 151 controls. Quantitative methylation analyses of the selected gene were carried out by MassARRAY platform System.
Results
The overall DNA methylation trend of
FKBP5
CpG sites in the case group was lower in comparison to the control group. Compared to healthy controls, lower methylation percentage of
FKBP5
-12 CpG 1 was observed in adolescents with persistent depressive symptoms after adjusting for covariates (case: 0.94 ± 2.00, control: 0.47 ± 0.92;
F
= 5.41,
P
= 0.021), although the statistical significance of the difference was lost after false discovery rate correction (
q
> 0.05). In addition, the hypomethylation of
FKBP5
-12 CpG 1 was approaching significance after adjustment for social-environmental factors (a
OR
= 0.77;
P
= 0.055), which indicated that no independent association was detected between hypomethylation of
FKBP5
CpG sites and persistent depressive symptoms. Furthermore, in the present study, we were unable to identify sex differences in the association of
FKBP5
gene methylation with depressive symptoms.
Conclusion
The decreased methylation level of
FKBP5
was observed in adolescents with persistent depressive symptoms, albeit non-significant after correction for multiple testing. Our results presented here are preliminary and underscore the complex gene-environment interactions relevant to the risk for depressive symptoms.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
/ Adult
/ Child & adolescent psychiatry
/ China
/ Female
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Social-environmental factors
/ Stress
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