Familial genetic and environmental transmission of depression: A multi‐informant twin family study

Author:

Ding Qingwen12ORCID,Zhou Yueyue3,Yu Shuting12,Cui Xiaobing12,Wang Xiaoyu12ORCID,Li Xinying12

Affiliation:

1. CAS Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

2. Department of Psychology University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

3. Department of Psychology Henan University Kaifeng China

Abstract

AbstractThe phenomenon of familial clustering in depression is well established, yet the mechanisms by which depression is transmitted within families remain poorly understood. In the current study, we investigate the familial genetic and environmental transmission of depression by incorporating data from both adolescent twins and their parents. A total of 987 twin families were recruited from the Beijing Twin Study. Depression assessments were conducted for both adolescents and their parents. Twins' depression was assessed through reports from both the twins themselves and their parents, while parental depression was assessed by parental self‐report. We employed a nuclear twin family model to examine genetic and environmental influences on adolescent depression. Our results, based on both self‐ and parent‐report, demonstrate significant additive and dominant genetic influences on depression. We also found mild yet significant sibling environmental influences, while familial environmental influences were absent. Notably, parent‐reported depression showed higher heritability but lower unique environmental influences compared with self‐reported depression. These results highlight the important role of genetic transmission and sibling environmental transmission in explaining depression. Our study delineates the underlying mechanism of familial transmission in depression and can inform early treatments to halt transmission during adolescence.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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