4.7 Article

Identification of drug repurposing candidates for the treatment of anxiety: A genetic approach

Journal

PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH
Volume 326, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115343

Keywords

Anxiety; Drug repurposing; Genome-wide association studies; Bioinformatics; Transcriptome-wide association study; Colocalization

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Anxiety disorders are prevalent and heritable neuropsychiatric diseases. By integrating genome-wide association study (GWAS) and functional genomic data, researchers identified genes associated with anxiety and discovered potential drug targets for anxiety treatment through drug repurposing.
Anxiety disorders are a group of prevalent and heritable neuropsychiatric diseases. We previously conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) which identified genomic loci associated with anxiety; however, the biological consequences underlying the genetic associations are largely unknown. Integrating GWAS and functional genomic data may improve our understanding of the genetic effects on intermediate molecular phenotypes such as gene expression. This can provide an opportunity for the discovery of drug targets for anxiety via drug repurposing. We used the GWAS summary statistics to determine putative causal genes for anxiety using MAGMA and colocalization analyses. A transcriptome-wide association study was conducted to identify genes with differential genetically regulated levels of gene expression in human brain tissue. The genes were integrated with a large drug-gene expression database (Connectivity Map), discovering compounds that are predicted to normalise anxiety-associated expression changes. The study identified 64 putative causal genes associated with anxiety (35 genes upregulated; 29 genes downregulated). Drug mechanisms adrenergic receptor agonists, sigma receptor agonists, and glutamate receptor agonists gene targets were enriched in anxiety-associated genetic signal and exhibited an opposing effect on the anxiety-associated gene expression signature. The significance of the project demonstrated genetic links for novel drug candidates to potentially advance anxiety therapeutics.

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