首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Genetic Association of Recovery from Eating Disorders: The Role of GABA Receptor SNPs
Authors:Cinnamon S Bloss   Wade Berrettini   Andrew W Bergen   Pierre Magistretti   Vikas Duvvuri   Michael Strober   Harry Brandt   Steve Crawford   Scott Crow   Manfred M Fichter   Katherine A Halmi   Craig Johnson   Allan S Kaplan   Pamela Keel   Kelly L Klump   James Mitchell   Janet Treasure   D Blake Woodside   Enrica Marzola   Nicholas J Schork   Walter H Kaye
Abstract:Follow-up studies of eating disorders (EDs) suggest outcomes ranging from recovery to chronic illness or death, but predictors of outcome have not been consistently identified. We tested 5151 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in approximately 350 candidate genes for association with recovery from ED in 1878 women. Initial analyses focused on a strictly defined discovery cohort of women who were over age 25 years, carried a lifetime diagnosis of an ED, and for whom data were available regarding the presence (n=361 ongoing symptoms in the past year, ie, ‘ill'') or absence (n=115 no symptoms in the past year, ie, ‘recovered'') of ED symptoms. An intronic SNP (rs17536211) in GABRG1 showed the strongest statistical evidence of association (p=4.63 × 10−6, false discovery rate (FDR)=0.021, odds ratio (OR)=0.46). We replicated these findings in a more liberally defined cohort of women age 25 years or younger (n=464 ill, n=107 recovered; p=0.0336, OR=0.68; combined sample p=4.57 × 10−6, FDR=0.0049, OR=0.55). Enrichment analyses revealed that GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid) SNPs were over-represented among SNPs associated at p<0.05 in both the discovery (Z=3.64, p=0.0003) and combined cohorts (Z=2.07, p=0.0388). In follow-up phenomic association analyses with a third independent cohort (n=154 ED cases, n=677 controls), rs17536211 was associated with trait anxiety (p=0.049), suggesting a possible mechanism through which this variant may influence ED outcome. These findings could provide new insights into the development of more effective interventions for the most treatment-resistant patients.
Keywords:GABA   anorexia nervosa   recovery from eating disorders   genetic association   single nucleotide polymorphisms   eating/metabolic disorders
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号