Helder Sietske G, Collier David A
MRC Social Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, Denmark Hill, London, SE5 8AF, UK.
Curr Top Behav Neurosci. 2011;6:157-75. doi: 10.1007/7854_2010_79.
The eating disorders anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder and allied diagnoses such as eating disorder not otherwise specified are common, complex psychiatric disorders with a significant genetic component. Aetiology is unknown, but both phenotypic characteristics and genetic factors appear to be shared across these disorders, and indeed patients often change between diagnostic categories. Molecular studies have attempted to define genetic risk factors for these disorders, including case-control and family-based candidate gene association studies and linkage analysis of multiply affected nuclear families. These have used both clinical diagnoses and eating disorder-related intermediate phenotypes such as drive-for-thinness or body dissatisfaction. Candidate gene studies have focussed on neurotransmitter and neurodevelopmental systems [e.g. serotonergic, opioid, cannabinoid and dopaminergic receptors, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)], appetite regulatory peptides and their receptors [leptin, ghrelin, agouti-related protein (AgRP), melanocortin receptors, neuropeptide Y], energy balance systems (e.g. uncoupling proteins), genes implicated in obesity (e.g. FTO) and sex hormone systems (e.g. oestrogen receptors), either identified on the basis of their function alone or as positional candidates from linkage analysis. Of these studies, linkage analysis implicates 1p33-36 for AN, 1q31.3 for quantitative behavioural traits related to anorexia and 10p14 for BN, as well as other behavioural phenotypes across both disorders. Candidate gene association has implicated BDNF, delta 1 opioid receptor (OPDR1) and AgRP. More recently, with the advent of genome-wide association studies (GWAS), analysis with microsatellite markers has implicated novel candidate loci for AN at 1q41 and 11q22, and further GWAS results are expected in the near future.
神经性厌食症(AN)、神经性贪食症(BN)、暴饮暴食症以及其他相关诊断,如未另行规定的进食障碍,都是常见的、复杂的精神疾病,具有显著的遗传成分。病因尚不清楚,但这些疾病似乎共享表型特征和遗传因素,事实上患者常常在不同诊断类别之间转变。分子研究试图确定这些疾病的遗传风险因素,包括病例对照研究和基于家系的候选基因关联研究,以及对多个受累核心家庭的连锁分析。这些研究使用了临床诊断和与进食障碍相关的中间表型,如追求瘦身或身体不满。候选基因研究聚焦于神经递质和神经发育系统[如血清素能、阿片样物质、大麻素和多巴胺能受体,以及脑源性神经营养因子(BDNF)]、食欲调节肽及其受体[瘦素、胃饥饿素、刺鼠相关蛋白(AgRP)、黑皮质素受体、神经肽Y]、能量平衡系统(如解偶联蛋白)、与肥胖相关的基因(如FTO)和性激素系统(如雌激素受体),这些要么是仅根据其功能确定的,要么是连锁分析中的定位候选基因。在这些研究中,连锁分析表明AN与1p33 - 36相关,与厌食症相关的定量行为特征与1q31.3相关,BN与10p14相关,以及这两种疾病的其他行为表型。候选基因关联研究表明BDNF、δ1阿片受体(OPDR1)和AgRP与之有关。最近,随着全基因组关联研究(GWAS)的出现,微卫星标记分析表明1q41和11q22处存在AN的新候选基因座,预计在不久的将来会有更多GWAS结果。