Ks. Kendler et al., SOURCES OF INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES IN DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS - ANALYSIS OF 2 SAMPLES OF TWINS AND THEIR FAMILIES, The American journal of psychiatry, 151(11), 1994, pp. 1605-1614
Objective: Self-reported symptoms of depression are commonly used in m
ental health research to assess current psychiatric state, yet wide va
riation in these symptoms among individuals has been found in both cli
nical and epidemiologic populations. The authors sought to understand
from a genetic-epidemiologic perspective, the sources of individual di
fferences in depressive symptoms. Method: Self-reported symptoms of de
pression were assessed in two samples of twins and their spouses, pare
nts, siblings, and offspring: one sample contained volunteer twins rec
ruited through the American Association of Retired Persons and their r
elatives (N=19,203 individuals) and the other contained twins from a p
opulation-based twin registry in Virginia and their relatives (N=11,24
2 individuals). Model fitting by an iterative, diagonal, weighted leas
t squares method was applied to the 80 different family relationships
in the extended twin-family design. Results: Independent analyses of t
he two samples revealed that the level of depressive symptoms was mode
stly familial, and familial resemblance could be explained solely by g
enetic factors and spousal resemblance. The estimated heritability of
depressive symptoms was between 30% and 37%. There was no evidence tha
t the liability to depressive symptoms was environmentally transmitted
from parents to offspring or was influenced by environmental factors
shared either generally among siblings or specifically between twins.
With correction for unreliability of measurement, genetic factors acco
unted for half of the stable variance in depressive symptoms. Conclusi
ons: Depressive symptoms in adulthood partly reflect enduring characte
ristics of temperament that are substantially influenced by hereditary
factors but little, or not at all, by shared environmental experience
s in the family of origin