Converging evidence for an impact of a functionalNOSgene variation on anxiety-related processes
Author(s) -
Manuel Kuhn,
Jan Haaker,
Evelyn Glotzbach-Schoon,
Dirk Schümann,
Marta Andreatta,
Marie-Luise Mechias,
Karolina A. Raczka,
Nina Gartmann,
Christian Büchel,
Andreas Mühlberger,
Paul Pauli,
Andreas Reif,
Raffaël Kalisch,
Tina B. Lonsdorf
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
social cognitive and affective neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.229
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1749-5024
pISSN - 1749-5016
DOI - 10.1093/scan/nsv151
Subject(s) - psychology , nos1 , fear conditioning , anxiety , amygdala , endophenotype , context (archaeology) , neuroscience , fear potentiated startle , developmental psychology , clinical psychology , cognition , psychiatry , nitric oxide synthase , biology , endocrinology , nitric oxide , paleontology
Being a complex phenotype with substantial heritability, anxiety and related phenotypes are characterized by a complex polygenic basis. Thereby, one candidate pathway is neuronal nitric oxide (NO) signaling, and accordingly, rodent studies have identified NO synthase (NOS-I), encoded by NOS1, as a strong molecular candidate for modulating anxiety and hippocampus-dependent learning processes. Using a multi-dimensional and -methodological replication approach, we investigated the impact of a functional promoter polymorphism (NOS1-ex1f-VNTR) on human anxiety-related phenotypes in a total of 1019 healthy controls in five different studies. Homozygous carriers of the NOS1-ex1f short-allele displayed enhanced trait anxiety, worrying and depression scores. Furthermore, short-allele carriers were characterized by increased anxious apprehension during contextual fear conditioning. While autonomous measures (fear-potentiated startle) provided only suggestive evidence for a modulatory role of NOS1-ex1f-VNTR on (contextual) fear conditioning processes, neural activation at the amygdala/anterior hippocampus junction was significantly increased in short-allele carriers during context conditioning. Notably, this could not be attributed to morphological differences. In accordance with data from a plethora of rodent studies, we here provide converging evidence from behavioral, subjective, psychophysiological and neuroimaging studies in large human cohorts that NOS-I plays an important role in anxious apprehension but provide only limited evidence for a role in (contextual) fear conditioning.
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