Genome-wide association study of seasonal affective disorder

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作者
Kwo Wei David Ho
Shizhong Han
Jakob V. Nielsen
Dubravka Jancic
Benjamin Hing
Jess Fiedorowicz
Myrna M. Weissman
Douglas F. Levinson
James B. Potash
机构
[1] University of Florida,Department of Neurology
[2] Johns Hopkins School of Medicine,Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
[3] University of Southern Denmark,Department of Neurobiology Research, Institute of Molecular Medicine
[4] University of Iowa,Department of Psychiatry
[5] Columbia University,Department of Psychiatry, College of Physicians and Surgeons
[6] The New York State Psychiatric Institute,Department of Psychiatry
[7] Stanford University School of Medicine,undefined
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Family and twin studies have shown a genetic component to seasonal affective disorder (SAD). A number of candidate gene studies have examined the role of variations within biologically relevant genes in SAD susceptibility, but few genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been performed to date. The authors aimed to identify genetic risk variants for SAD through GWAS. The authors performed a GWAS for SAD in 1380 cases and 2937 controls of European-American (EA) origin, selected from samples for GWAS of major depressive disorder and of bipolar disorder. Further bioinformatic analyses were conducted to examine additional genomic and biological evidence associated with the top GWAS signals. No susceptibility loci for SAD were identified at a genome-wide significant level. The strongest association was at an intronic variant (rs139459337) within ZBTB20 (odds ratio (OR) = 1.63, p = 8.4 × 10−7), which encodes a transcriptional repressor that has roles in neurogenesis and in adult brain. Expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) analysis showed that the risk allele “T” of rs139459337 is associated with reduced mRNA expression of ZBTB20 in human temporal cortex (p = 0.028). Zbtb20 is required for normal murine circadian rhythm and for entrainment to a shortened day. Of the 330 human orthologs of murine genes directly repressed by Zbtb20, there were 32 associated with SAD in our sample (at p < 0.05), representing a significant enrichment of ZBTB20 targets among our SAD genetic association signals (fold = 1.93, p = 0.001). ZBTB20 is a candidate susceptibility gene for SAD, based on a convergence of genetic, genomic, and biological evidence. Further studies are necessary to confirm its role in SAD.
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