2009-09-01
Genetic and environmental influences on pro-inflammatory monocytes in bipolar disorder: A twin study
Publication
Publication
Archives of General Psychiatry , Volume 66 - Issue 9 p. 957- 965
Context: A monocyte pro-inflammatory state has previously been reported in bipolar disorder (BD). Objective: To determine the contribution of genetic and environmental influences on the association between monocyte pro-inflammatory state and BD. Design: A quantitative polymerase chain reaction case-control study of monocytes in bipolar twins. Determination of the influence of additive genetic, common, and unique environmental factors by structural equation modeling (ACE). Setting: Dutch academic research center. Participants: Eighteen monozygotic BD twin pairs, 23 dizygotic BD twin pairs, and 18 monozygotic and 16 dizygotic healthy twin pairs. Main Outcome Measures: Expression levels of monocytes in the previously reported coherent set of 19 genes (signature) reflecting the pro-inflammatory state. Results: The familial occurrence of the association between the monocyte pro-inflammatory gene-expression signature and BD found in the within-trait/cross-twin correlations (twin correlations) was due to shared environmental factors (ie, both monozygotic and dizygotic ratios in twin correlations approximated 1; ACE modeling data: 94% [95% confidence interval, 53%-99%] explained by common [shared] environmental factors). Although most individual signature genes followed this pattern, there was a small subcluster of genes in which genetic influences could dominate. Conclusion: The association of the monocyte proinflammatory state with BD is primarily the result of a common shared environmental factor.
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doi.org/10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2009.116, hdl.handle.net/1765/25164 | |
Archives of General Psychiatry | |
Organisation | Erasmus MC: University Medical Center Rotterdam |
Padmos, R., van Baal, C., Vonk, R., Wijkhuijs, A., Kahn, R., Nolen, W., & Drexhage, H. (2009). Genetic and environmental influences on pro-inflammatory monocytes in bipolar disorder: A twin study. Archives of General Psychiatry, 66(9), 957–965. doi:10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2009.116 |