PLoS ONE (Oct 2009)

Variants in doublecortin- and calmodulin kinase like 1, a gene up-regulated by BDNF, are associated with memory and general cognitive abilities.

  • Stéphanie Le Hellard,
  • Bjarte Håvik,
  • Thomas Espeseth,
  • Harald Breilid,
  • Roger Løvlie,
  • Michelle Luciano,
  • Alan J Gow,
  • Sarah E Harris,
  • John M Starr,
  • Karin Wibrand,
  • Astri J Lundervold,
  • David J Porteous,
  • Clive R Bramham,
  • Ian J Deary,
  • Ivar Reinvang,
  • Vidar M Steen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007534
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 10
p. e7534

Abstract

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Human memory and general cognitive abilities are complex functions of high heritability and wide variability in the population. The brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) plays an important role in mammalian memory formation.Based on the identification of genes markedly up-regulated during BDNF-induced synaptic consolidation in the hippocampus, we selected genetic variants that were tested in three independent samples, from Norway and Scotland, of adult individuals examined for cognitive abilities. In all samples, we show that markers in the doublecortin- and calmodulin kinase like 1 (DCLK1) gene, are significantly associated with general cognition (IQ scores) and verbal memory function, resisting multiple testing. DCLK1 is a complex gene with multiple transcripts which vary in expression and function. We show that the short variants are all up-regulated after BDNF treatment in the rat hippocampus, and that they are expressed in the adult human brain (mostly in cortices and hippocampus). We demonstrate that several of the associated variants are located in potential alternative promoter- and cis-regulatory elements of the gene and that they affect BDNF-mediated expression of short DCLK1 transcripts in a reporter system.These data present DCLK1 as a functionally pertinent gene involved in human memory and cognitive functions.