rs11062170 - CACNA1C

Magnitude 2.2 · 2 studies on file

Reported associations

  • Depression pathophysiology, risk prediction of recurrence and comorbid psychiatric disorders using genome-wide analyses. - Nature medicine (2023) · Als TD, Kurki MI, Grove J, Voloudakis G, Therrien K, Tasanko E, Nielsen TT, Naamanka J, Veerapen K, Levey DF, Bendl J, Bybjerg-Grauholm J, Zeng B, Demontis D, Rosengren A, Athanasiadis G, Bækved-Hansen M, Qvist P, Bragi Walters G, Thorgeirsson T, Stefánsson H, Musliner KL, Rajagopal VM, Farajzadeh L, Thirstrup J, Vilhjálmsson BJ, McGrath JJ, Mattheisen M, Meier S, Agerbo E, Stefánsson K, Nordentoft M, Werge T, Hougaard DM, Mortensen PB, Stein MB, Gelernter J, Hovatta I, Roussos P, Daly MJ, Mors O, Palotie A, Børglum AD · PubMed 37464041

    Depression is a common psychiatric disorder and a leading cause of disability worldwide. Here we conducted a genome-wide association study meta-analysis of six datasets, including >1.3 million individuals (371,184 with depression) and identified 243 risk loci. Overall, 64 loci were new, including genes encoding glutamate and GABA receptors, which are targets for antidepressant drugs. Intersection with functional genomics data prioritized likely causal genes and revealed new enrichment of prenatal GABAergic neurons, astrocytes and oligodendrocyte lineages. We found depression to be highly polygenic, with ~11,700 variants explaining 90% of the single-nucleotide polymorphism heritability, estimating that >95% of risk variants for other psychiatric disorders (anxiety, schizophrenia, bipolar di

  • Genome-wide association study of over 40,000 bipolar disorder cases provides new insights into the underlying biology - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 34002096

    ABSTRACT: Bipolar disorder (BD) is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 41,917 BD cases and 371,549 controls of European ancestry, which identified 64 associated genomic loci. BD risk alleles were enriched in genes in synaptic signaling pathways and brain-expressed genes, particularly those with high specificity of expression in neurons of the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. Significant signal enrichment was found in genes encoding targets of antipsychotics, calcium channel blockers, antiepileptics, and anesthetics. Integrating eQTL data implicated 15 genes robustly linked to BD via gene expression, encoding druggable targets such as HTR6, MCHR1, DCLK3 and FURIN. Analyses of BD subtypes indicated high but imperfect gene


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Lifestyle context

Concrete actions anchored to the cited research. We do not prescribe, we describe.

Discuss with your doctor

  • bipolar I and depression genetic risk and screening options High

    Genome-wide significant associations with bipolar I disorder (p=2e-16) and depression (p=1e-8) warrant clinical discussion of screening, family history implications, and preventive strategies.

    discuss genetic findings, psychiatric screening timing, family history implications, and preventive management approaches

Screening

  • psychiatric symptoms for bipolar I and depression High

    CACNA1C rs11062170 G allele is strongly associated with bipolar I disorder and major depression through calcium channel-mediated neurotransmission in brain.

    discuss screening assessment with healthcare provider; monitor for mood episodes, sleep disruption, and depressive symptoms