Dept. of Psychiatry, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Campus Mitte, Berlin, Germany; Division of Mind and Brain Research, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Campus Mitte, Berlin, Germany.
Dept. of Psychiatry, Central Institute of Mental Health, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.
Neuroimage. 2014 Jul 1;94:147-154. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.03.007. Epub 2014 Mar 16.
Variation in the CACNA1C gene has consistently been associated with psychosis in genome wide association studies. We have previously shown in a sample of n=110 healthy subjects that carriers of the CACNA1C rs1006737 risk variant exhibit hippocampal and perigenual anterior cingulate dysfunction (pgACC) during episodic memory recall. Here, we aimed to replicate our results, by testing for the effects of the rs1006737 risk variant in a new large cohort of healthy controls. We furthermore sought to refine these results by identifying the impact of a CACNA1C specific, gene-wide risk score in the absence of clinical pathology. An independent sample of 179 healthy subjects genotyped for rs1006737 underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while performing an associative episodic memory task and underwent psychological testing similar to the discovery sample. The effect of gene-wide risk scores was analyzed in the combined sample of 289 subjects. We replicated our discovery findings of hippocampal and pgACC dysfunction in carriers of the rs1006737 risk variant. Additionally, we observed diminished activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, in the replication sample. Our replicated results as well as this new effect were also observable in the combined sample. Moreover, the same system-level phenotypes were significantly associated with the individual gene-based genetic risk score. Our findings suggest that altered hippocampal and frontolimbic function is associated with variants in the CACNA1C gene. Since CACNA1C variants have been associated repeatedly with psychosis at a genome-wide level, and preclinical data provide convergent evidence for the relevance of the CACNA1C gene for hippocampal and frontolimbic plasticity and adaptive regulation of stress, our data suggest a potential pathophysiological mechanism conferred by CACNA1C variants that may mediate risk for symptom dimensions shared among bipolar disorder, major depression, and schizophrenia.
CACNA1C 基因的变异与全基因组关联研究中的精神病一直有关。我们之前在 110 名健康受试者的样本中表明,CACNA1C rs1006737 风险变体的携带者在情节记忆回忆期间表现出海马体和前扣带回功能障碍(pgACC)。在这里,我们旨在通过在新的大型健康对照队列中测试 rs1006737 风险变体来复制我们的结果。我们还通过在没有临床病理学的情况下确定 CACNA1C 特定的全基因风险评分的影响来进一步改进这些结果。179 名健康受试者接受了 rs1006737 的基因分型,他们在进行联想情节记忆任务时接受了功能磁共振成像(fMRI),并接受了与发现样本相似的心理测试。在 289 名受试者的合并样本中分析了全基因风险评分的影响。我们复制了我们在 rs1006737 风险变体携带者中发现的海马体和 pgACC 功能障碍的发现结果。此外,我们在复制样本中还观察到背外侧前额叶皮层的激活减少。我们的复制结果以及这一新效应在合并样本中也可见。此外,相同的系统水平表型与个体基因遗传风险评分显著相关。我们的研究结果表明,CACNA1C 基因变异与海马体和额眶边缘功能障碍有关。由于 CACNA1C 变体在全基因组水平上与精神病反复相关,并且临床前数据提供了 CACNA1C 基因与海马体和额眶边缘可塑性以及应激的适应性调节的相关性的收敛性证据,我们的数据表明 CACNA1C 变体赋予的潜在病理生理机制可能介导双相情感障碍、重度抑郁症和精神分裂症的症状维度的风险。