Seratonin genes affect depression
Q. Episodes of depression seem to be common over several generations in my family. Is depression genetic?
There is substantial evidence that depression is a hereditary disease — a depression gene known as 5-HTTLPR has been found.
The World Health Organization reports that more than 120 million people worldwide suffer from depression. At least 10 percent of people in the U.S. will experience major depressive disorder at some point in their lives — two times as many women as men experience major depression.
In 2011, Dr. Srijan Sen, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan, and his team of researchers reported that
people with a short variation of the serotonin “transporter” (5-HTTLPR)
gene are more likely to become depressed under stress than those with
the longer variation of the gene.
Serotonin
is a neurotransmitter, a chemical substance that transmits impulses
across the spaces (synapses) between nerve cells (neurons). Alterations
in serotonin levels in the brain can influence mood. The 5-HTTLPR gene
interferes with the serotonin process in the brain. Some antidepressant
medications work by affecting the action of serotonin.
The
Michigan research confirmed the findings of a 2003 study in which
scientists, for the first time, established the link between genes and
environment in depression. In 2009, however, an analysis in which
scientists pooled 14 studies found no heightened risk of depression
among those with different versions of the gene.
Dr. Sen’s team wanted to settle the controversy that arose after the 2009 report. The group gathered
all 54 studies on the subject, including data from about 41,000
volunteers. Based on this much broader analysis, the team concluded that
5-HTTLPR does confer a greater risk of depression when combined with
stress.
“This is the final
word,” Dr. Sen said. “This meta-analysis includes three or four times as
many studies, and, clearly, there is an effect.”
One
of Dr. Sen’s findings is especially interesting to me. He said that it
seems that people with 5-HTTLPR are more reactive to all positive and
negative events. Any study of artists reveals a high incidence of
depression. Could it be that writers, musicians, painters and other
artists with higher sensitivity have the shorter gene? I hope science
will explore art someday and produce data on this subject.
Later,
in 2011, a British-led international team found a DNA region linked to
depression. Another team from the United States replicated this finding.
The researchers said they believed many genes were involved in
depression.
“These findings will help
us track down specific genes that are altered in people with this
disease,” said Gerome Breen of King’s College London’s Institute of
Psychiatry, who led one of the research groups.
Recently,
a study in Florida reported that there is a happy gene that affects
females but not males. The gene that can make women happy is MAOA, which
affects brain chemistry.
Fred Cicetti is a
freelance writer who specializes in health. He has been writing
professionally since 1963. Before he began freelancing, he was a
reporter and columnist for three daily newspapers in New Jersey. If you
would like to ask a question, write to fred@healthygeezer.com.