A Common Polymorphism in the Cannabinoid Receptor 1 (CNR1) Gene is Associated with Antipsychotic-Induced Weight Gain in Schizophrenia

被引:0
作者
Arun K Tiwari
Clement C Zai
Olga Likhodi
Annika Lisker
Deepika Singh
Renan P Souza
Poonam Batra
Syed H E Zaidi
Sheng Chen
Fang Liu
Imke Puls
Herbert Y Meltzer
Jeffrey A Lieberman
James L Kennedy
Daniel J Müller
机构
[1] Neurogenetics Section,Department of Neuroscience
[2] Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,Department of Psychiatry
[3] Charité University Medicine Berlin,Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine
[4] Campus Mitte,Department of Neuroscience
[5] Berlin,Department of Psychiatry
[6] Germany,undefined
[7] University Health Network & University of Toronto,undefined
[8] Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,undefined
[9] University of Toronto,undefined
[10] Psychiatric Hospital at Vanderbilt University,undefined
[11] College of Physicians and Surgeons,undefined
[12] Columbia University and the New York State Psychiatric Institute,undefined
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2010年 / 35卷
关键词
CNR1; clozapine; olanzapine; weight gain; genetics; association;
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学科分类号
摘要
Antipsychotic-induced weight gain has emerged as a serious complication in the treatment of patients with atypical antipsychotic drugs. The cannabinoid receptor 1 (CNR1) is expressed centrally in the hypothalamic region and associated with appetite and satiety, as well as peripherally. An antagonist of CNR1 (rimonabant) has been effective in causing weight loss in obese patients indicating that CNR1 might be important in antipsychotic-induced weight gain. Twenty tag SNPs were analyzed in 183 patients who underwent treatment (with either clozapine, olanzapine, haloperidol, or risperidone) for chronic schizophrenia were evaluated for antipsychotic-induced weight gain for up to 14 weeks. The polymorphism rs806378 was nominally associated with weight gain in patients of European ancestry treated with clozapine or olanzapine. ‘T’ allele carriers (CT+TT) gained more weight (5.96%), than the CC carriers (2.76%, p=0.008, FDR q-value=0.12). This translated into approximately 2.2 kg more weight gain in patients carrying the T allele than the patients homozygous for the CC genotype (CC vs CT+TT, 2.21±4.51 vs 4.33±3.89 kg; p=0.022). This was reflected in the allelic analysis (C vs T allele, 3.84 vs 5.83%, p=0.035). We conducted electrophoretic mobility shift assays which showed that the presence of the T allele created a binding site for arylhydrocarbon receptor translocator (ARNT), a member of the basic helix–loop–helix/Per–Arnt–Sim protein family. In this study, we provide evidence that the CNR1 gene may be associated with antipsychotic-induced weight gain in chronic schizophrenia patients. However, these observations were made in a relatively small patient population; therefore these results need to be replicated in larger sample sets.
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页码:1315 / 1324
页数:9
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