Association at SYNE1 in both bipolar disorder and recurrent major depression

E. K. Green, D. Grozeva, L. Forty, K. Gordon-Smith, E. Russell, A. Farmer, M. Hamshere, I. R. Jones, L. Jones, P. McGuffin, J. L. Moran, S. Purcell, P. Sklar, M. J. Owen, M. C. O'Donovan, N. Craddock

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

74 Scopus citations

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified a number of loci that have strong support for their association with bipolar disorder (BD). The Psychiatric Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) Consortium Bipolar Disorder Working Group (PGC-BD) meta-analysis of BD GWAS data sets and replication samples identified evidence (P=6.7 × 10 -7, odds ratio (OR)=1.147) of association with the risk of BD at the polymorphism rs9371601 within SYNE1, a gene which encodes nesprin-1. Here we have tested this polymorphism in an independent BD case (n=1527) and control (n=1579) samples, and find evidence for association (P=0.0095) with similar effect sizes to those previously observed in BD (allelic OR=1.148). In a combined (meta) analysis of PGC-BD data (both primary and replication data) and our independent BD samples, we found genome-wide significant evidence for association (P=2.9 × 10 -8, OR=1.104). We have also examined the polymorphism in our recurrent unipolar depression cases (n=1159) and control (n=2592) sample, and found that the risk allele was associated with risk for recurrent major depression (P=0.032, OR=1.118). Our findings add to the evidence that association at this locus influences susceptibility to bipolar and unipolar mood disorders.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)614-617
Number of pages4
JournalMolecular Psychiatry
Volume18
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2013

Keywords

  • SYNE1
  • bipolar disorder
  • genetics
  • rs9371601
  • unipolar depression

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