Interaction of Both Positive and Negative Daily-Life Experiences with FKBP5 Haplotype on Psychosis Risk.

Publication date

2021-07-02T15:31:38Z

2021-07-02T15:31:38Z

2020-02-07

2021-07-02T15:31:39Z

Abstract

Background: There is limited research on the interaction of both positive and negative daily-life environments with stress-related genetic variants on psychotic experiences (PEs) and negative affect (NA) across the extended psychosis phenotype. This study examined whether the FK506 binding protein 51 (FKBP5) variability moderates the association of positive and negative experiences in the moment with PEs and NA in participants with incipient psychosis and their nonclinical counterparts. Methods: A total of 233 nonclinical and 86 incipient psychosis participants were prompted for a 1-week period to assess their day-to-day experiences. Participants were genotyped for four FKBP5 single nucleotide polymorphisms (rs3800373, rs9296158, rs1360780, and rs9470080). Results: Multilevel analyses indicated that, unlike the risk haplotype, the protective FKBP5 haplotype moderated all the associations of positive experiences with diminished PEs and NA in incipient psychosis compared with nonclinical group. Conclusions: Participants with incipient psychosis showed symptomatic improvement when reporting positive appraisals in the interpersonal domain, which suggests that these act as a powerful coping mechanism. The fact that this occurred in daily-life underscores the clinical significance of this finding and pinpoints the importance of identifying protective mechanisms. In addition, results seem to concur with the vantage sensitivity model of gene-environment interaction, which poses that certain genetic variants may enhance the likelihood of benefiting from positive exposures.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2019.4

European Psychiatry, 2020, vol. 63(1), num. e11

https://doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2019.4

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Rights

cc-by (c) Cristóbal Narváez, Paula et al., 2020

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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