4.4 Article

Genetic analyses of the endocannabinoid pathway in association with affective phenotypic variants

Journal

NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 744, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2020.135600

Keywords

Pathway analysis; eCB; Stress response; Depression; Anxiety

Categories

Funding

  1. New Molecules in Mood Disorders, Sixth Framework Program of the EU
  2. Hungarian Brain Research Program
  3. National Development Agency
  4. Hungarian National Development Agency
  5. Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  6. ITM/NKFIH Thematic Excellence Programme
  7. Semmelweis University
  8. SE-Neurology FIKP
  9. New National Excellence Program of The Ministry of Human Capacities
  10. Hungarian Scientific Academy
  11. National Institute for Health Research Manchester Biomedical Research Centre
  12. Hungarian Academy of Sciences (MTA-SE Neuropsychopharmacology and Neurochemistry Research Group)

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This study aimed to test the associations between genetic variants of the eCB pathway, childhood trauma and affective phenotypes. The results showed that the CACNA1C gene plays a significant role in the pathogenic effect of early life stress in the development of affective vulnerability, suggesting that childhood trauma related depression may have more robust genetically determined basis.
Backgorund: Increasing experimental data confirm the crucial role of the endocannabinoid (eCB) system in the regulation of stress response and emotional processes. Despite of the fact, that genetically determined vulnerability for stress is a widely accepted concept in the pathomechanism of affective disorders, replicable human genetic results with interaction analyses of early life trauma and eCB genes are rare. The aim of this study is to test the associations between genetic variants of the eCB pathway, childhood trauma and affective phenotypes. Methods: We selected 18,897 SNPs in the eCB pathway of a GWAS dataset in two general population cohorts (BP sample N = 837; MN sample N = 988). Association analyses were performed on the anxious and depressive subscales of the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI-ANX and BSI-DEP, respectively). Childhood trauma was assessed by the Childhood Adversity Questionnaire (CAQ). Association analyses were performed in the R 2.0. statistical program using the SNPassoc package. Reults: Genetic effect was more robust in the BP sample than in the MN sample. The most comprehensive results showed that SNPs in the CACNAIC gene associated with depressive phenotype in interaction with CAQ in both BP (p = 1.2 x 10(-4)) and MN samples (p = 1.6 x 10(-4)). Direct association analyses (without interaction) provided significant associations between SNPs in different genesets of the two study populations. SNPs in KCNJ3 and GNB5 genes on the BSI-DEP (p = 6.1 x 10(-5); p = 7.1 x 10(-4)) and GNG12 gene on the BSI-ANX (p = 7.4 x 10(-6)) in the BP sample, while GABAergic, ADCYI and HTR2A gene variants can be outlined from results of MN sample with less strong p-values. Conclusion: Our results confirmed the prominent role of CACNA1C gene in the pathogenic effect of early life stress in the development of affective vulnerability in two different study populations using GxE interaction analysis. CACNA1C gene, as it encodes for L-type voltage-gated calcium channel, contributes to neuronal excitability, plasticity and neurogenesis being a crucial effector of both eCB signaling and the BDNF-CREB pathway as well. Our findings suggest that childhood trauma related depression may have more robust genetically determined basis than without early life stress.

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