- Author:
	        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Antonio DRAGO
			        		
			        		
			        		
			        			1
			        			
			        		
			        		
			        		
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Barbara MONTI
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Diana DE RONCHI
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Alessandro SERRETTI
			        		
			        		
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		
			        		Author Information
			        		
 - Publication Type:Original Article
 - Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Gene; SNP; CRY1; Depressive episode
 - MeSH: Bipolar Disorder; Circadian Rhythm; Clinical Coding; Genes, vif; Genome; Humans; Introns; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Recurrence*
 - From:Psychiatry Investigation 2015;12(1):118-124
 - CountryRepublic of Korea
 - Language:English
 - Abstract: OBJECTIVE: A relevant part of the social and personal burden caused by Bipolar Disorder (BD) is related to depressive phases. Authors investigated the genetic impact of a set of variations located in CRY1, a gene involved in the control of the circadian rhythms, towards depressive episodes in a sample of bipolar patients from the STEP-BD sample. As a secondary analysis, CYR1 variations were analyzed as predictors of sleep disruption. METHODS: 654 bipolar patients were included in the analysis. Data were available genome-wide. The part of the genome coding for the CRY1 was imputed and pruned according to standards in the field. 7 SNPs were available for the analysis. A correction for multitesting was applied and we had sufficient power (0.80) to detect a small-medium effect size (0.22) between two allelic frequencies each one represented by at least 300 subjects. RESULTS: Intronic rs10861688 was associated with the number of depressive events corrected for the times patients were assessed during the period of observation. In particular, AA subjects (n=21) had 4.46+/-3.15 events, AG (n=141) had 3.08+/-3.17 and GG (n=342) 2.65+/-2.97 (p=0.0048, beta=-0.22). No other significant associations were reported. CONCLUSION: We bring further evidence that genes involved in the regulation of circadian rhythms may be relevant to depressive bipolar phases. Independent confirmation analyses are mandatory.
 
            
