RESUMEN
The heritability of major depressive disorder (MDD) is reportedly 30-50%. However, the genetic basis of its heritability remains unknown. Within SITH-1, a risk factor for MDD in human herpesvirus 6B (HHV-6B), we discovered a gene polymorphism with a large odds ratio for an association with MDD. It was a sequence whose number of repeats was inversely correlated with SITH-1 expression. This number was significantly lower in MDD patients. Rates for 17 or fewer repeats of the sequence were 67.9% for MDD and 28.6% for normal controls, with an odds ratio of 5.28. For patients with 17 or less repeats, the rate for presence of another MDD patient in their families was 47.4%, whereas there were no MDD patients in the families of patients with more than 17 repeats. Since HHV-6B is transmitted primarily mother to child and within families and persists for life, this gene polymorphism could potentially influence heritability of MDD.
RESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: There has been little research on human herpesvirus 6B (HHV-6B) in healthy adults and prevalences in different age groups have been unclear. Therefore, the major objective of this study was to evaluate seroprevalence to HHV-6 antibodies in ordinary working people and examine the effect of aging on seroprevalence. Also, as HHV-6B is reactivated in saliva, another objective was to investigate an association between age and HHV-6B reactivation based on measured salivary HHV-6 DNA levels. METHODS: Our subjects were 77 ordinary office workers who underwent a health checkup. In this population, we measured anti-HHV-6 antibody titers using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and salivary HHV-6 DNA levels. In addition to examining an association with age, we examined associations with body mass index, smoking habit, and alcohol consumption as confounding factors. RESULTS: There was a significant decrease in the seropositivity of HHV-6 antibodies in subjects of 50 years and older, and age was significantly negatively correlated with anti-HHV-6 antibody titers. Age and salivary HHV-6 DNA levels were also significantly negatively correlated but there were no significant correlations with other factors. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that HHV-6B reactivation is attenuated by aging. Thus, HHV-6 antibodies steadily decrease in the body with aging.