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Major Depressive Disorder Is Associated With Differential Expression of Innate Immune and Neutrophil-Related Gene Networks in Peripheral Blood: A Quantitative Review of Whole-Genome Transcriptional Data From Case-Control Studies

Authors :
Wittenberg, Gayle M
Greene, Jon
Vértes, Petra E
Drevets, Wayne C
Bullmore, Edward T
Vertes, Petra [0000-0002-0992-3210]
Bullmore, Edward [0000-0002-8955-8283]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Whole-genome transcription has been measured in peripheral blood samples as a candidate biomarker of inflammation associated with major depressive disorder. METHODS: We searched for all case-control studies on major depressive disorder that reported microarray or RNA sequencing measurements on whole blood or peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Primary datasets were reanalyzed, when openly accessible, to estimate case-control differences and to evaluate the functional roles of differentially expressed gene lists by technically harmonized methods. RESULTS: We found 10 eligible studies (N = 1754 depressed cases and N = 1145 healthy controls). Fifty-two genes were called significant by 2 of the primary studies (published overlap list). After harmonization of analysis across 8 accessible datasets (n = 1706 cases, n = 1098 controls), 272 genes were coincidentally listed in the top 3% most differentially expressed genes in 2 or more studies of whole blood or peripheral blood mononuclear cells with concordant direction of effect (harmonized overlap list). By meta-analysis of standardized mean difference across 4 studies of whole-blood samples (n = 1567 cases, n = 954 controls), 343 genes were found with false discovery rate

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b56a9c4a4c7aadc3b76f3205b20cc912
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.52210