| Literature DB >> 29867348 |
Shih-Jen Tsai1,2,3.
Abstract
Neurotrophins have been implicated in the pathophysiology of many neuropsychiatric diseases. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is the most abundant and widely distributed neurotrophin in the brain. Its Val66Met polymorphism (refSNP Cluster Report: rs6265) is a common and functional single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) affecting the activity-dependent release of BDNF. BDNF Val66Met transgenic mice have been generated, which may provide further insight into the functional impact of this polymorphism in the brain. Considering the important role of BDNF in brain function, more than 1,100 genetic studies have investigated this polymorphism in the past 15 years. Although these studies have reported some encouraging positive findings initially, most of the findings cannot be replicated in following studies. These inconsistencies in BDNF Val66Met genetic studies may be attributed to many factors such as age, sex, environmental factors, ethnicity, genetic model used for analysis, and gene-gene interaction, which are discussed in this review. We also discuss the results of recent studies that have reported the novel functions of this polymorphism. Because many BDNF polymorphisms and non-genetic factors have been implicated in the complex traits of neuropsychiatric diseases, the conventional genetic association-based method is limited to address these complex interactions. Future studies should apply data mining and machine learning techniques to determine the genetic role of BDNF in neuropsychiatric diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Val66Met polymorphism; age; brain-derived neurotrophic factor; environmental factors; ethnicity; genetic study; sex; transgenic mice
Year: 2018 PMID: 29867348 PMCID: PMC5962780 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2018.00156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Meta-analyses of studies of the BDNF Val66Met polymorphism in neuropsychiatric diseases.
| Number of | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Disease/phenotype | Studies | studies | Participants | Result |
| Major depressive disorder | 14 | 2,812 cases; 10,843 controls | Met increased risk for depression in men but not in women. | |
| 5 | 523 cases; 1,220 controls | Met increased risk for geriatric depression. | ||
| 26 | 4,582 cases; 12,995 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| 22 | 14,233 participants | Val66Met polymorphism significantly moderated the relationship between life stress and depression. | ||
| 31 | 21,060 participants | Life stress interacted with the Met in depression risk. | ||
| Response to antidepressant | 8 | 1,115 cases | Val66Met heterozygous patients had a better response rate in comparison to Val homozygous patients, especially in Asian population. | |
| 16 | Met carriers had a better response rate than Val/Val carriers in Asians. | |||
| Suicide behaviors | 12 | 1,202 cases; 2,150 controls | Met carriers and Met allele conferred risk for suicide. | |
| 23 | 4,532 cases; 5,364 controls | Met is the risk allele in Caucasian; Val is the risk allele in Asian. | ||
| Bipolar disorder | 11 | 3,143 cases; 6,347 controls | Lack of association. | |
| 22 | 9,349 cases; 7,437 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| 21 | 7,219 cases; 9,832 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| Schizophrenia | 9 | 1,404 cases; 1597 controls | Lack of association. | |
| 11 | 3,032 cases; 4,080 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| 8 | 2,059 cases; 2,765 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| 12 | 3,338 cases; 4,635 controls | Met/Met increased the risk of schizophrenia. | ||
| 16 | 2,991 cases; 3,962 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| 13 | 2,955 cases; 4,035 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| 22 | 6,568 cases; 8,824 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| 39 | Met/Met increased the risk of schizophrenia in Asian and European populations. | |||
| 44 | 11,480 cases; 13,490 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| Response to antipsychotics | 9 | 2,461 antipsychotic-treated patients | Lack of association. | |
| Antipsychotic-induced tardive dyskinesia | 6 | 1,740 antipsychotic-treated patients | Lack of association. | |
| Generalized Anxiety Disorder | 7 | 1,092 cases; 8,394 controls | Lack of association. | |
| Neuroticism | 5 | 1,633 participants | Met carriers had lower Neuroticism score. | |
| Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) | 6 | 696 cases; 1,726 controls | Lack of association. | |
| 9 | 1,066 cases; 2,559 were controls | Met carriers had increased risk of PTSD. | ||
| Panic disorder | 6 | A significant association in recessive model. | ||
| Obsessive-compulsive disorder | 8 | 1,632 cases; 2,417 controls | Lack of association. | |
| Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder | 4 | 1,445 adulthood patients; 2,247;controls | Lack of association. | |
| Eating disorder | 5 | 1,733cases; 1,811 controls | Met increased the risk of eating disorder. | |
| 9 | 2,767 cases; 3,322 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| Cognition | 32 | 5,922 participants | Met carriers performed worse than the Val homozygotes in memory. | |
| 23 | 7,095 participants | Lack of association. | ||
| Hippocampal volume | 7 | 399 participants | Met carriers had smaller hippocampal volumes than Val homozygotes. | |
| 27 | 5,298 participants | Met carriers had slightly smaller hippocampal volumes than Val homozygotes. | ||
| 18 | 1,695 neuropsychiatric patients | Lack of association. | ||
| Alcohol dependence | 9 | 2,553 cases; 2,709 controls | Lack of association. | |
| Substance abuse | 6 | 1,361 cases; 1,164 controls | Val homozygotes conferred risk for substance abuse. | |
| 20 | 4,665 cases; 4,754 controls | Val increased the risk of methamphetamine dependence in south Asian participants and the risk of heroin dependence in Chinese participants. | ||
| Adult-onset dystonia | 7 | 1,936 cases; 2,519 controls | Lack of association. | |
| Migraine | 5 | 1,442 cases; 1,880 controls | Met increased the risk of migraine. | |
| 4 | 1,598 cases; 1,585 controls | Met increased the risk of migraine. | ||
| Parkinson’s disease | 6 | 1,419 cases; 1,406 controls. | Lack of association. | |
| 13 | 3,333 cases; 3,418 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| 15 | 3,754 cases; 4,026 controls | Lack of association. | ||
| Alzheimer’s disease (AD) | 16 | 4,711 cases; 4,537 controls | Met increased the risk of AD in women, but not in men. | |
| 29 | 7,548 cases; 7,334 controls | Met increased the risk of AD in Caucasian females. | ||
| 23 | 6,504 cases; 6,636 controls | Lack of association. | ||