Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic Rochester, Rochester, MN, USA.
1] Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital, Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon, Monterrey, Mexico [2] Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, Mayo Clinic Rochester, Rochester, MN, USA.
Mol Psychiatry. 2014 Sep;19(9):1010-6. doi: 10.1038/mp.2013.159. Epub 2013 Dec 10.
Bipolar disorder (BD) is associated with higher body mass index (BMI) and increased metabolic comorbidity. Considering the associated phenotypic traits in genetic studies of complex diseases, either by adjusting for covariates or by investigating interactions between genetic variants and covariates, may help to uncover the missing heritability. However, obesity-related traits have not been incorporated in prior genome-wide analyses of BD as covariates or potential interacting factors. To investigate the genetic factors underlying BD while considering BMI, we conducted genome-wide analyses using data from the Genetic Association Information Network BD study. We analyzed 729,454 genotyped single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers on 388 European-American BD cases and 1020 healthy controls with available data for maximum BMI. We performed genome-wide association analyses of the genetic effects while accounting for the effect of maximum BMI, and also evaluated SNP-BMI interactions. A joint test of main and interaction effects demonstrated significant evidence of association at the genome-wide level with rs12772424 in an intron of TCF7L2 (P=2.85E-8). This SNP exhibited interaction effects, indicating that the bipolar susceptibility risk of this SNP is dependent on BMI. TCF7L2 codes for the transcription factor TCF/LF, part of the Wnt canonical pathway, and is one of the strongest genetic risk variants for type 2 diabetes (T2D). This is consistent with BD pathophysiology, as the Wnt pathway has crucial implications in neurodevelopment, neurogenesis and neuroplasticity, and is involved in the mechanisms of action of BD and depression treatments. We hypothesize that genetic risk for BD is BMI dependent, possibly related to common genetic risk with T2D.
双相情感障碍 (BD) 与较高的体重指数 (BMI) 和增加的代谢合并症有关。在复杂疾病的遗传研究中,考虑到相关的表型特征,无论是通过调整协变量还是调查遗传变异与协变量之间的相互作用,都可能有助于揭示缺失的遗传率。然而,肥胖相关特征尚未作为协变量或潜在的相互作用因素纳入先前对 BD 的全基因组分析中。为了在考虑 BMI 的情况下研究 BD 的遗传因素,我们使用遗传关联信息网络 BD 研究的数据进行了全基因组分析。我们分析了 388 名欧洲裔美国 BD 病例和 1020 名具有最大 BMI 可用数据的健康对照者的 729454 个基因分型单核苷酸多态性 (SNP) 标记。我们在考虑最大 BMI 影响的情况下进行了遗传效应的全基因组关联分析,还评估了 SNP-BMI 相互作用。主效应和交互效应的联合检验在全基因组水平上显示出与 TCF7L2 内含子中 rs12772424 显著关联的证据(P=2.85E-8)。该 SNP 表现出交互作用效应,表明该 SNP 的双相易感性风险取决于 BMI。TCF7L2 编码转录因子 TCF/LF,是 Wnt 经典途径的一部分,是 2 型糖尿病 (T2D) 的最强遗传风险变体之一。这与 BD 病理生理学一致,因为 Wnt 途径对神经发育、神经发生和神经可塑性具有至关重要的意义,并且涉及 BD 和抑郁症治疗的作用机制。我们假设 BD 的遗传风险与 BMI 相关,可能与 T2D 的常见遗传风险有关。