Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift/Konferencebidrag i tidsskrift /Bidrag til avis › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › peer review
Insight gained from genome-wide interaction and enrichment analysis on weight gain during citalopram treatment. / Corfitsen, Henrik Thyge; Drago, Antonio.
I: Neuroscience Letters, Bind 637, 2017, s. 38–43.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift/Konferencebidrag i tidsskrift /Bidrag til avis › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › peer review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Insight gained from genome-wide interaction and enrichment analysis on weight gain during citalopram treatment
AU - Corfitsen, Henrik Thyge
AU - Drago, Antonio
N1 - Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Weight gain is a possible side effect of the pharmacological antidepressant treatments. Defining antidepressant prescriptions based on personal genetic makeups would decrease the risk of weight gain and increase the quality of the current antidepressant pharmacological treatments. 643 depressed, citalopram treated individuals with available clinical and genome-wide genetic information were investigated to identify the molecular pathways associated with weight gain. 111 individuals experienced weight gain during citalopram treatment. The axon guidance (p.adjust=0.005) and the developmental biology pathway (p.adjust=0.01) were enriched in variations associated with weight gain. The developmental biology pathway includes molecular cascades involved in the regulation of beta-cell development, and the transcriptional regulation of white adipocyte differentiation. A number of variations were harbored by genes whose products are involved in the synthesis of collagen (COL4A3, COL5A1 and ITGA1), activity of the thyroid-hormones (NCOR1 and NCOR2), energy metabolism (ADIPOQ, PPARGC1A) and myogenic differentiation (CDON). A molecular pathway analysis conducted in a sample of depressed patients identified new candidate genes whose future investigation may provide insights in the molecular events that drive weight gain during antidepressant treatment.
AB - Weight gain is a possible side effect of the pharmacological antidepressant treatments. Defining antidepressant prescriptions based on personal genetic makeups would decrease the risk of weight gain and increase the quality of the current antidepressant pharmacological treatments. 643 depressed, citalopram treated individuals with available clinical and genome-wide genetic information were investigated to identify the molecular pathways associated with weight gain. 111 individuals experienced weight gain during citalopram treatment. The axon guidance (p.adjust=0.005) and the developmental biology pathway (p.adjust=0.01) were enriched in variations associated with weight gain. The developmental biology pathway includes molecular cascades involved in the regulation of beta-cell development, and the transcriptional regulation of white adipocyte differentiation. A number of variations were harbored by genes whose products are involved in the synthesis of collagen (COL4A3, COL5A1 and ITGA1), activity of the thyroid-hormones (NCOR1 and NCOR2), energy metabolism (ADIPOQ, PPARGC1A) and myogenic differentiation (CDON). A molecular pathway analysis conducted in a sample of depressed patients identified new candidate genes whose future investigation may provide insights in the molecular events that drive weight gain during antidepressant treatment.
U2 - 10.1016/j.neulet.2016.11.056
DO - 10.1016/j.neulet.2016.11.056
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 27899308
VL - 637
SP - 38
EP - 43
JO - Neuroscience Letters
JF - Neuroscience Letters
SN - 0304-3940
ER -