Depression and alcohol use disorders as gendered phenotypes of 5-HTTLPR

Citation

Hamby, Bryant W. (2014). Depression and alcohol use disorders as gendered phenotypes of 5-HTTLPR.

Abstract

The serotonin transporter linked polymorphic region (5-HTTLPR) has been associated with both depression and alcohol use disorders in previous gene-environment interaction studies, but these associations have not been consistent. Previous research on mental health has posited that depression and alcohol use disorders are functionally equivalent manifestations of distress, with men displaying alcohol use disorders and women displaying depression in response to stress. This paper assesses whether the presence of the risk-conferring serotonin gene alleles increase an individual's chance of expressing distress as either depression or alcohol use disorders, depending on gender. The hypotheses that more symptoms of depression would be present in women who had more copies of the risk alleles compared to others, while more symptoms of alcohol use disorders would be present in men who had more copies of the risk alleles compared to others were tested. Data comes from waves I and IV of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. The dependent variables are the number of symptoms of depression as measured by the CES-D and the number of symptoms of DSM-IV criteria for either alcohol abuse or alcohol dependence. The main explanatory variables include serotonin gene genotype and sex as a proxy for gender identity. The hypotheses were first tested using linear regression with ordinary least squares estimators, then with linear fixed effects regression in a siblings only sample to control for population stratification. No evidence of a gene-environment interaction of gender by serotonin allele in either alcohol use disorders or depression was found, therefore the hypotheses were not supported. However, future studies using measures of gender that incorporate more of the social constructs of the concept may be successful in showing a gene-environment interaction. The implications of the lack of results are discussed.

URL

http://libproxy.lib.unc.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/1613238781?accountid=14244

Keyword(s)

Social sciences

Notes

Copyright - Copyright ProQuest, UMI Dissertations Publishing 2014

Reference Type

Thesis/Dissertation

Book Title

Medical Sociology

Author(s)

Hamby, Bryant W.

Series Author(s)

Cockerham, William C.

Year Published

2014

Volume Number

1564112

Pages

104

Publisher

The University of Alabama at Birmingham

City of Publication

Ann Arbor

ISSN/ISBN

9781321151527

DOI

9781321151527

Reference ID

5251