4.7 Article

The ANK3 Bipolar Disorder Gene Regulates Psychiatric-Related Behaviors That Are Modulated by Lithium and Stress

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 73, Issue 7, Pages 683-690

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2012.10.016

Keywords

Ankyrin G; dentate gyrus; GWAS; mouse; RNA interference; schizophrenia

Funding

  1. Stanley Medical Research Institute
  2. RNAi Consortium
  3. Massachusetts General Hospital Executive Committee on Research
  4. McGovern Institute Neurotechnology Program
  5. Robert J. and Nancy D. Carney Fund for Scientific Innovation
  6. Bristol Myers Squibb
  7. Pfizer

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Background: Ankyrin 3 (ANK3) has been strongly implicated as a risk gene for bipolar disorder (BD) by recent genome-wide association studies of patient populations. However, the genetic variants of ANK3 contributing to BD risk and their pathological function are unknown. Methods: To gain insight into the potential disease relevance of ANK3, we examined the function of mouse Ank3 in the regulation of psychiatric-related behaviors using genetic, neurobiological, pharmacological, and gene-environment interaction (G x E) approaches. Ank3 expression was reduced in mouse brain either by viral-mediated RNA interference or through disruption of brain-specific Ank3 in a heterozygous knockout mouse. Results: RNA interference of Ank3 in hippocampus dentate gyrus induced a highly specific and consistent phenotype marked by decreased anxiety-related behaviors and increased activity during the light phase, which were attenuated by chronic treatment with the mood stabilizer lithium. Similar behavioral alterations of reduced anxiety and increased motivation for reward were also exhibited by Ank3+/- heterozygous mice compared with wild-type Ank3+/+ mice. Remarkably, the behavioral traits of Ank3+/- mice transitioned to depression-related features after chronic stress, a trigger of mood episodes in BD. Ank3+/- mice also exhibited elevated serum corticosterone, suggesting that reduced Ank3 expression is associated with elevated stress reactivity. Conclusions: This study defines a new role for Ank3 in the regulation of psychiatric-related behaviors and stress reactivity that lends support for its involvement in BD and establishes a general framework for determining the disease relevance of genes implicated by patient genome-wide association studies.

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