Major depressive disorder-associated SIRT1 locus affects the risk for suicide in women after middle age

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Abstract

A recent genome-wide association study (GWAS) for major depressive disorder (MDD) in Chinese women identified a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), rs12415800, near the Sirtuin1 (SIRT1) gene as one of the top candidate loci. However, no study has shown a genetic association between SIRT1 and completed suicide, which is one of the most serious outcomes of MDD. In this study, 778 suicide completers and 760 controls in a Japanese population were genotyped for two SNPs in strong linkage disequilibrium (rs12415800 and rs4746720 in 3′UTR). We found significant associations between both SNPs and completed suicide among women aged ≥50 years. Additional analysis using postmortem brain tissues (10 suicide brains and 13 non-suicide brains) revealed the following: while SIRT1 gene expression in the prefrontal cortex did not differ between suicide and non-suicide brains, DNAJC12 gene expression, potentially implicated by the SNPs genotyped here, was significantly decreased in suicide brains (p = 0.003). In conclusion, regarding the genetic association of SIRT1 with MDD that was previously identified in women by the Chinese GWAS, we successfully validated our results using a female suicidal cohort in the same Asian population with the same direction of allelic effect.

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Hirata, T., Otsuka, I., Okazaki, S., Mouri, K., Horai, T., Boku, S., … Hishimoto, A. (2019). Major depressive disorder-associated SIRT1 locus affects the risk for suicide in women after middle age. Psychiatry Research, 278, 141–145. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2019.06.002

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