Gene expression as a diagnostic marker for depression
background Major Depressive Disorder
(mdd) is a highly heritable disorder with high
lifetime prevalence. At present, laboratory blood
tests for mdd are not available.
aim To classify mdd patients based on
whole blood gene expression profiles.
methods A classifier approach on gene
expression profiles in (stimulated) blood of unmedicated
patients and controls selected from the
Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety was
performed to select genes of which the expression
is predictive for the disease status. In total, 35 mdd
patients and 36 healthy controls, aged 20 to 63
years. Gene expression was measured using whole
genome microarrays, co-hybridizing basal and ex
vivo lipopolysaccharide (lps; 10 ng/ml blood)-
stimulated blood from each subject, or using
quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qpcr).
results We identified a molecular marker
set (23 genes) of mdd in 42 subjects based on
the combination of basal and stimulated blood
gene expression that was superior to that from
genes from basal blood only. The mdd-marker
was confirmed in an independent validation set of
25 subjects. In addition, a subset of the marker
genes (11 genes) classified a partially overlapping
set of subjects according to disease state using an
independent quantitative pcr method. The
mdd-marker correlated with mdd severity, suggesting
predictive validity.
conclusion We provide first evidence
to classify mdd patients based on whole blood
gene expression profiles. The identification of an
mdd-marker from challenged blood samples has
the prospect for development of prognostic tools
and markers for treatment efficacy.