Catenin Alpha 2 May Be a Biomarker or Potential Drug Target in Psychiatric Disorders with Perseverative Negative Thinking.
Nora EszlariZsolt BagyuraAndras MillinghofferTamas NagyGabriella JuhászPeter AntalBela MerkelyGyorgy BagdyPublished in: Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
AlphaN-catenin gene CTNNA2 has been implicated in intrauterine brain development, as well as in several psychiatric disorders and cardiovascular diseases. Our present aim was to investigate CTNNA2 gene-wide associations of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with psychiatric and cardiovascular risk factors to test the potential mediating role of rumination, a perseverative negative thinking phenotype in these associations. Linear mixed regression models were run by FaST-LMM within a sample of 795 individuals from the Budakalasz Health Examination Survey. The psychiatric outcome variables were rumination and its subtypes, and ten Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) scores including, e.g., obsessive-compulsive, depression, anxiety, hostility, phobic anxiety, and paranoid ideation. Cardiovascular outcome variables were BMI and the Framingham risk scores for cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease, myocardial infarction, and stroke. We found nominally significant CTNNA2 associations for every phenotype. Rumination totally mediated the associations of CTNNA2 rs17019243 with eight out of ten BSI scores, but none with Framingham scores or BMI. Our results suggest that CTNNA2 genetics may serve as biomarkers, and increasing the expression or function of CTNNA2 protein may be a potential new therapeutic approach in psychiatric disorders with perseverative negative thinking including, e.g., depression. Generally, an antiruminative agent could be a transdiagnostic and preventive psychopharmacon.
Keyphrases
- cardiovascular disease
- cardiovascular risk factors
- sleep quality
- depressive symptoms
- mental health
- genome wide
- body mass index
- human health
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- cell proliferation
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- heart failure
- public health
- copy number
- poor prognosis
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- left ventricular
- cross sectional
- weight gain
- signaling pathway
- white matter
- risk assessment
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- amino acid
- brain injury
- cerebral ischemia
- adverse drug
- weight loss
- resting state
- climate change
- functional connectivity
- electronic health record