The Molecular Genetics of Dissociative Symptomatology: A Transdiagnostic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Quality of the Included Studies
3.2. Study Populations
3.3. Definition of the Phenotype of Interest
3.4. Associations with Specific Polymorphisms or Genotypes
3.5. Gene–Environment Interactions
3.6. Genome-Wide Association Studies
3.7. Other Study Designs
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors | Study Population and Sample Size | Study Design | Phenotype | Polymorphisms Studied, if Applicable | Study Quality-Overall | Study Quality–Bias | Study Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lochner et al., 2004 [40] | Patients with obsessive–compulsive disorder or trichotillomania (n = 114); Caucasian ethnicity | Association | Dissociative symptoms, total | DRD4 48-bp VNTR, DAT 40-bp VNTR, 5HTTLPR, HTR1B G861C, HTR2C T102C, TPH1 Val81Met, COMT rs4680, MAOA C1460T polymorphisms | Moderate | Poor | No association between dissociation and any of the studied polymorphisms. |
Koenen et al., 2005 [41] | Children with acute injuries (n = 46) | Association | Dissociative symptoms, total | FKBP5 rs3800373, rs1360870 SNPs | Poor | Poor | FKBP5 rs3800373 C allele and rs1360870 T allele significantly associated with dissociation during and after injury |
Lochner et al., 2007 [42] | Patients with obsessive–compulsive disorder; Caucasian ethnicity (n = 83) | Association, G×E (childhood maltreatment) | Dissociative symptoms, total | 5-HTTLPR polymorphism | Moderate | Good | Interaction between 5-HTT s (particularly s/s genotype) and childhood trauma associated with dissociation |
Savitz et al., 2008 [43] | Patients with bipolar disorder and their relatives (n = 178) | Association, G×E (childhood trauma) | Dissociative symptoms, total | COMT rs4680, DRD4 48-bp VNTR, BDNF Val66Met, 5-HTTLPR, DAT 3’-VNTR | Moderate | Poor | BDNF Met associated with lower self-reported dissociation; interaction between COMT Val and childhood trauma associated with dissociation |
Tadic et al., 2009 [44] | Patients with borderline personality disorder (n = 161) and healthy controls (n = 156); Caucasian ethnicity | Association with control group | Dissociative symptoms, total | SCN9A rs16851799, rs7607967, rs4371369, rs4597545, rs4387806, rs6754031, rs12620053, rs13017637, rs12994338, rs4447616 SNPs and haplotype | Good | Good | Possible association between SCN9A rs7607967 (G) and dissociation; possible interaction between rs4371369 (G) and rs4387806 (C), sex, and dissociation |
McLean et al., 2011 [45] | Motor vehicle accident victims; Caucasian ethnicity (n = 89) | Association | Dissociative symptoms, total | COMT rs4633, rs4680, rs4818 and rs6269 haplotype | Moderate | Good | Association between “pain-vulnerable” COMT haplotype (A_C_C_G) and dissociative symptoms following trauma. |
Pieper et al., 2011 [46] | Adult twin pairs (n = 184) | Association, G×E (traumatic stress) | Dissociative symptoms, total | 5-HTTLPR genotype | Moderate | Good | 5-HTTLPR s/s genotype associated with dissociation in general; s/s genotype associated with pathological dissociation in those with a history of trauma |
Dackis et al., 2012 [47] | High-risk, low-income women with (n = 170) and without (n = 66) childhood maltreatment | G×E (childhood maltreatment) with control group | Dissociative symptoms, total | FKBP5 rs3800373, rs9296158, rs1360870, rs9470080 haplotype | Good | Good | Interaction between FKBP5 CATT haplotype and childhood trauma associated with dissociation |
Schmahl et al., 2013 [48] | Women hospitalized for borderline personality disorder (n = 31) | Gene expression | Dissociative symptoms, total | 29 genes selected based on prior associations with depression | Moderate | Good | IL6 gene expression positively correlated with dissociation; IL1B, MAPK1, MAPK3, MAPK8, GNAI2, ARRB1, ARRB2, CREB1 expression negatively correlated with dissociation |
Wolf et al., 2014 [49] | Adults with a history of trauma exposure (n = 484); Caucasian ethnicity | Genome-wide association | Depersonalization / derealization symptoms | Not applicable | Good | Good | No genome-wide significant associations; ten suggestive associations with depersonalization / derealization; highest peaks at ADCY8 rs263232 and DPP6 rs71534169; no replication of earlier associations with 5-HTTLPR, COMT or FKBP5 |
Reiner et al., 2016 [50] | Pre-menopausal women with depression (n = 43) and healthy controls (n = 41); Caucasian ethnicity | Association, G×E (unresolved attachment) with control group | Depersonalization / derealization symptoms | OXTR rs53576 (A/G) SNP | Moderate | Good | Trend towards higher depersonalization / derealization symptoms in women with the OXTR rs53576 GG genotype; interaction between OXTR GG genotype and unresolved attachment associated with dissociation. |
McCoy et al., 2017 [51] | Patients from academic medical centers participating in biobanking programs (n = 10845), Northern European ethnicity | Genome-wide association | Anxiety, phobic and dissociative disorders | Not applicable | Good | Poor | Possible association between the group “anxiety, phobic and dissociative disorders” and locus on chromosome 4 containing the APBB2 gene. |
Yaylaci et al., 2017 [52] | Low-income adolescents with (n = 279) and without (n = 171) childhood maltreatment | G×E interaction (childhood maltreatment) with control group | Dissociative symptoms, total | FKBP5 rs3800373, rs9296158, rs1360870, rs9470080 haplotype | Good | Good | Possible protective effect of FKBP5 CATT haplotype on dissociation in those with an early-onset and longer duration of maltreatment |
Yu et al., 2017 [53] | Patients with depression (n = 203) and healthy controls (n = 196); Mexican-American ethnicity | Association with control group | Depersonalization/derealization symptoms | 19 SNPs identified in a prior study: rs41310573, rs201935337, rs140395831, rs56293203, rs78562453, rs115054458, rs143696449, rs748441912, rs62001028, rs150952348, rs782472239, rs112610420, rs142029931, rs201483250, rs200897153, rs3744550, rs115668237, rs56344012 rs200520741 | Moderate | Good | Evidence of a latent depressive subtype associated with 19 SNPs, associated with lower depersonalization / derealization scores |
Honma et al., 2018 [54] | Normal individuals (n = 76), Japanese ethnicity | Association | Dissociative symptoms, total | COMT rs4680 genotype | Moderate | Good | COMT rs4680 Val/Val genotype associated with total dissociative symptoms and depersonalization/derealization symptoms but not dissociative amnesia symptoms |
Kember et al., 2021 [55] | Patients from an academic medical center participating in a biobanking program (n = 10182); European ethnicity | Polygenic risk score | Anxiety, phobic and dissociative disorders | PRS for six common psychiatric disorders (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder and anorexia nervosa) | Good | Good | PRS for depression and bipolar disorder both significantly associated with “anxiety, phobic and dissociative disorders” |
Park et al., 2021 [56] | Patients from an academic medical center participating in a biobanking program (n = 10,845) | Exome-wide association | Anxiety, phobic and dissociative disorders | Not applicable | Good | Good | No association identified for the group “anxiety, phobic and dissociative disorders” |
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Rajkumar, R.P. The Molecular Genetics of Dissociative Symptomatology: A Transdiagnostic Literature Review. Genes 2022, 13, 843. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13050843
Rajkumar RP. The Molecular Genetics of Dissociative Symptomatology: A Transdiagnostic Literature Review. Genes. 2022; 13(5):843. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13050843
Chicago/Turabian StyleRajkumar, Ravi Philip. 2022. "The Molecular Genetics of Dissociative Symptomatology: A Transdiagnostic Literature Review" Genes 13, no. 5: 843. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13050843
APA StyleRajkumar, R. P. (2022). The Molecular Genetics of Dissociative Symptomatology: A Transdiagnostic Literature Review. Genes, 13(5), 843. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13050843