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Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a common illness accompanied by considerable morbidity, mortality, costs, and heightened risk of suicide. We conducted a genome-wide association meta-analysis based in 135,458 cases and 344,901 controls and identified 44 independent and significant loci. The genetic findings were associated with clinical features of major depression and implicated brain regions exhibiting anatomical differences in cases. Targets of antidepressant medications and genes involved in gene splicing were enriched for smaller association signal. We found important relationships of genetic risk for major depression with educational attainment, body mass, and schizophrenia: lower educational attainment and higher body mass were putatively causal, whereas major depression and schizophrenia reflected a partly shared biological etiology. All humans carry lesser or greater numbers of genetic risk factors for major depression. These findings help refine the basis of major depression and imply that a continuous measure of risk underlies the clinical phenotype.

Original publication

DOI

10.1038/s41588-018-0090-3

Type

Journal article

Journal

Nature genetics

Publication Date

05/2018

Volume

50

Pages

668 - 681

Addresses

Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. naomi.wray@uq.edu.au.

Keywords

eQTLGen, 23andMe, Major Depressive Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, Humans, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Risk Factors, Case-Control Studies, Depressive Disorder, Major, Schizophrenia, Multifactorial Inheritance, Phenotype, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Female, Male, Genome-Wide Association Study