PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Gender differences in associations of glutamate decarboxylase 1 gene (GAD1) variants with panic disorder.

  • Heike Weber,
  • Claus Jürgen Scholz,
  • Katharina Domschke,
  • Christian Baumann,
  • Benedikt Klauke,
  • Christian P Jacob,
  • Wolfgang Maier,
  • Jürgen Fritze,
  • Borwin Bandelow,
  • Peter Michael Zwanzger,
  • Thomas Lang,
  • Lydia Fehm,
  • Andreas Ströhle,
  • Alfons Hamm,
  • Alexander L Gerlach,
  • Georg W Alpers,
  • Tilo Kircher,
  • Hans-Ulrich Wittchen,
  • Volker Arolt,
  • Paul Pauli,
  • Jürgen Deckert,
  • Andreas Reif

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037651
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
p. e37651

Abstract

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BackgroundPanic disorder is common (5% prevalence) and females are twice as likely to be affected as males. The heritable component of panic disorder is estimated at 48%. Glutamic acid dehydrogenase GAD1, the key enzyme for the synthesis of the inhibitory and anxiolytic neurotransmitter GABA, is supposed to influence various mental disorders, including mood and anxiety disorders. In a recent association study in depression, which is highly comorbid with panic disorder, GAD1 risk allele associations were restricted to females.Methodology/principal findingsNineteen single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) tagging the common variation in GAD1 were genotyped in two independent gender and age matched case-control samples (discovery sample n = 478; replication sample n = 584). Thirteen SNPs passed quality control and were examined for gender-specific enrichment of risk alleles associated with panic disorder by using logistic regression including a genotype×gender interaction term. The latter was found to be nominally significant for four SNPs (rs1978340, rs3762555, rs3749034, rs2241165) in the discovery sample; of note, the respective minor/risk alleles were associated with panic disorder only in females. These findings were not confirmed in the replication sample; however, the genotype×gender interaction of rs3749034 remained significant in the combined sample. Furthermore, this polymorphism showed a nominally significant association with the Agoraphobic Cognitions Questionnaire sum score.Conclusions/significanceThe present study represents the first systematic evaluation of gender-specific enrichment of risk alleles of the common SNP variation in the panic disorder candidate gene GAD1. Our tentative results provide a possible explanation for the higher susceptibility of females to panic disorder.