MK4MDD

Study Report

Reference
CitationBermingham R, 2012 PubMed
Full InfoBermingham R, Carballedo A, Lisiecka D, Fagan A, Morris D, et al. (2012) Effect of genetic variant in BICC1 on functional and structural brain changes in depression. Neuropsychopharmacology 37: 2855-2862.

Study
Hypothesis or Background Genes and early-life adversity (ELA) interactively increase the risk of developing major depressive disorder (MDD). A recent genome-wide association study suggests that the minor T-allele of single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the bicaudal C homolog 1 gene (BICC1) has a protective role against MDD. The aims of the study were to investigate whether the minor T-allele of BICC1 is protective against hippocampal structural brain changes, whether it is associated with increased functional brain activity in the emotion regulation system, and how ELA would modify this association.
Sample InformationForty-four patients with MDD and 44 healthy controls
Method DetailForty-four patients with MDD and 44 healthy controls were investigated using structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and functional MRI with an emotion inhibition task. Analysis of a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the BICC1-1 (rs999845) gene was performed.
Method Keywordsgenotyping; fMRI, sMRI
ResultRight hippocampal bodies of patients and controls without a history of ELA and who carry the protective T-allele of BICC1 were significantly larger compared with those participants homozygous for the major C-allele of BICC1. However, MDD patients with ELA, who carry the T-allele, had smaller hippocampal head volumes compared with MDD patients without ELA. FMRI showed that patients and controls carrying the protective T-allele of BICC1 activate the emotion regulation system significantly more compared with those participants homozygous for the major C-allele (p<0.05, family wise error corrected).
ConclusionsThese results are suggestive that the minor T-allele of BICC1 has a protective role against MDD and its known structural and functional brain changes. However, this protective effect seems to be lost in the case of co-occurrence of ELA.

Relationships reported by Bermingham R, 2012