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Abnormal neural sensitivity to rewards as a candidate process of high depression risk in the FMR 1 premutation: A pilot study.

Roslyn HaroldBridgette KelleherKeisha NovakWei Siong NeoTeagan StumpTaylor LeeTessa GarwoodElizabeth Berry-KravisDan Foti
Published in: Journal of mood and anxiety disorders (2024)
The etiological heterogeneity of depression poses a challenge for prevention and intervention efforts. One solution is to map unique etiological pathways for subgroups defined by a singular risk factor. A relevant population for this approach is women who carry the premutation of the fragile X messenger ribonucleoprotein 1 ( FMR 1) gene, who are at high risk for adult-onset depression. This study explores a candidate neurophysiological marker of depression risk: reduced reward sensitivity, indexed by the reward positivity (RewP). The RewP has been linked to depression risk in the general population, but is unexplored within FMR 1 premutation carriers. 16 women with the FMR 1 premutation and a matched control group completed a simple guessing task while the electroencephalogram was recorded. Among premutation carriers, RewP difference score (win versus loss) was reduced. These preliminary finding suggest that the FMR 1 premutation may confer increased risk for depression in part through abnormal neural sensitivity to rewards.
Keyphrases
  • depressive symptoms
  • sleep quality
  • risk factors
  • type diabetes
  • adipose tissue
  • gene expression
  • pregnant women
  • transcription factor
  • genome wide
  • single cell
  • prefrontal cortex