Abstract

A novel cosegregating splice site variant in the Dynactin-1 (DCTN1) gene was discovered by Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) in a family with a history of bipolar disorder (BD) and major depressive diagnosis (MDD). Psychiatric illness in this family follows an autosomal dominant pattern. DCTN1 codes for the largest dynactin subunit, namely p150Glued, which plays an essential role in retrograde axonal transport and in neuronal autophagy. A GT→TT transversion in the DCTN1 gene, uncovered in the present work, is predicted to disrupt the invariant canonical splice donor site IVS22 + 1G > T and result in intron retention and a premature termination codon (PTC). Thus, this splice site variant is predicted to trigger RNA nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) and/or result in a C-terminal truncated p150Glued protein (ct-p150Glued), thereby negatively impacting retrograde axonal transport and neuronal autophagy. BD prophylactic medications, and most antipsychotics and antidepressants, are known to enhance neuronal autophagy. This variant is analogous to the dominant-negative GLUED Gl1 mutation in Drosophila, which is responsible for a neurodegenerative phenotype. The newly identified variant may reflect an autosomal dominant cause of psychiatric pathology in this affected family. Factors that affect alternative splicing of the DCTN1 gene, leading to NMD and/or ct-p150Glued, may be of fundamental importance in contributing to our understanding of the etiology of BD as well as MDD.

Highlights

  • Bipolar disorder (BD) is a chronic and severe psychiatric disorder

  • When confounding variants were removed through filtering, a transversion splice site variant in the DCTN1 gene (IVS22 + 1G > T, GRCh37/hg19: 2:74,593,585C > A) was discovered using Next Generation Sequencing (NGS)

  • The DCTN1 splice site variant discovered in the current research is cosegregating, novel, and in a highly evolutionary conserved region, but it is predicted to be deleterious

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Summary

Introduction

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a chronic and severe psychiatric disorder. In most cases, it is a recurrent psychiatric disorder characterized by oscillations between mania and major depressive episodes, some patients may only experience mania. BDI is generally regarded as more severe than BDII due to the presence of mania in BDI patients compared to an absence or decreased severity of mania in BDII affected individuals [1]. Cyclothymic disorder or bipolar disorder III (BDIII) is regarded as part of the BD spectrum of illnesses, sharing similar characteristics with other BDs. BDIII is rarely diagnosed because symptoms are generally below the threshold required for a definitive diagnosis of BD. In many cases, individuals with cyclothymic disorder go on later to experience episodes of mania and develop

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