Translational Psychiatry (Jun 2023)

Impact of genetic variants within serotonin turnover enzymes on human cerebral monoamine oxidase A in vivo

  • Marie Spies,
  • Matej Murgaš,
  • Chrysoula Vraka,
  • Cecile Philippe,
  • Gregor Gryglewski,
  • Lukas Nics,
  • Theresa Balber,
  • Pia Baldinger-Melich,
  • Annette M. Hartmann,
  • Dan Rujescu,
  • Marcus Hacker,
  • Edda Winkler-Pjrek,
  • Dietmar Winkler,
  • Rupert Lanzenberger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-023-02506-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Variants within the monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A, MAOA) and tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TPH2) genes, the main enzymes in cerebral serotonin (5-HT) turnover, affect risk for depression. Depressed cohorts show increased cerebral MAO-A in positron emission tomography (PET) studies. TPH2 polymorphisms might also influence brain MAO-A because availability of substrates (i.e. monoamine concentrations) were shown to affect MAO-A levels. We assessed the effect of MAOA (rs1137070, rs2064070, rs6323) and TPH2 (rs1386494, rs4570625) variants associated with risk for depression and related clinical phenomena on global MAO-A distribution volume (VT) using [11C]harmine PET in 51 participants (21 individuals with seasonal affective disorder (SAD) and 30 healthy individuals (HI)). Statistical analyses comprised general linear models with global MAO-A VT as dependent variable, genotype as independent variable and age, sex, group (individuals with SAD, HI) and season as covariates. rs1386494 genotype significantly affected global MAO-A VT after correction for age, group and sex (p < 0.05, corr.), with CC homozygotes showing 26% higher MAO-A levels. The role of rs1386494 on TPH2 function or expression is poorly understood. Our results suggest rs1386494 might have an effect on either, assuming that TPH2 and MAO-A levels are linked by their common product/substrate, 5-HT. Alternatively, rs1386494 might influence MAO-A levels via another mechanism, such as co-inheritance of other genetic variants. Our results provide insight into how genetic variants within serotonin turnover translate to the cerebral serotonin system. Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT02582398. EUDAMED Number: CIV-AT-13-01-009583.