(Press-News.org) LA JOLLA, CA—September 11, 2013—The largest DNA-sequencing study of anorexia nervosa has linked the eating disorder to variants in a gene coding for an enzyme that regulates cholesterol metabolism. The finding suggests that anorexia could be caused in part by a disruption in the normal processing of cholesterol, which may disrupt mood and eating behavior.
"These findings point in a direction that probably no one would have considered taking before," said Nicholas J. Schork, a professor at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI). Schork was the senior investigator for the multicenter study, which was published recently online ahead of print in the journal Molecular Psychiatry.
Anorexia affects up to 1 percent of women, and has an estimated mortality rate of 10 or more percent, making it perhaps the deadliest of psychiatric illnesses. Anorexics severely restrict eating and become emaciated, yet see themselves as fat. Individuals with anorexia nervosa tend to be perfectionistic, anxious or depressed, and obsessive, said Walter Kaye, a co-author on the study, professor at the University of California (UC), San Diego School of Medicine and principal investigator of the Price Foundation Genetic Studies of Anorexia Nervosa.
How the disorder develops is still not fully understood. Anorexia predominantly affects girls and young women (the estimated gender ratio is nearly 10:1) and appears to be influenced in part by cultural factors, stress, puberty and social networks. Yet twin studies suggest that genetic factors have the largest influence.
The big mystery has been: what are those genetic factors? Gene-association studies of anorexics have so far produced few replicable findings. Researchers suspect that many genes can contribute to the disorder—and thus only large studies will have the statistical power to detect those individual genetic influences.
For this project—the largest-ever sequencing study of anorexia—Schork worked with an international team of collaborators representing more than two dozen research institutions. The many contributors included first author Ashley Scott-Van Zeeland from The Scripps Translational Science Institute and Scripps Health in La Jolla, California; Kaye and Pei-an Betty Shih from the UC San Diego; Andrew Bergen from SRI International in Menlo Park, California; Wade Berretini from the University of Pennsylvania; and Pierre Magistreti from Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. The project made use of genetic information from more than 1,200 anorexia patients and nearly 2,000 non-anorexic control subjects.
For an initial "discovery" study in 334 subjects, the researchers catalogued the variants of a large set of genes that had already been linked to feeding behavior or had been flagged in previous anorexia studies. Of more than 150 candidate genes, only a handful showed statistical signs of a linkage with anorexia in this group of subjects.
One of the strongest signs came from the gene EPHX2, which codes for epoxide hydrolase 2—an enzyme known to regulate cholesterol metabolism. "When we saw that, we thought that we might be onto something, because nobody else had reported this gene as having a pronounced role in anorexia," said Schork.
The team followed up with several replication studies, each using a different cohort of anorexia patients and controls, as well as different genetic analysis methods. The scientists continued to find evidence that certain variants of EPHX2 occur more frequently in people with anorexia.
To help make sense of these findings, they looked at existing data from a large-scale, long-term heart disease study and determined that a subset of the implicated EPHX2 variants have the effect of altering the normal relationship between weight gain and cholesterol levels.
"We thought that with further studies this EPHX2 finding might go away, or appear less compelling, but we just kept finding evidence to suggest that it plays a role in anorexia," said Schork.
It isn't yet clear how EPHX2 variants that cause an abnormal metabolism of cholesterol would help trigger or maintain anorexia. But Schork noted that people with anorexia often have remarkably high cholesterol levels in their blood, despite being severely malnourished. Moreover, there have been suggestions from other studies that weight loss, for example in people with depression, can lead to increases in cholesterol levels. At the same time, there is evidence that cholesterol, a basic building block of cells, particularly in the brain, has a positive association with mood. Conceivably, some anorexics for genetic reasons may feel an improved mood, via higher cholesterol, by not eating.
"The hypothesis would be that in some anorexics the normal metabolism of cholesterol is disrupted, which could influence their mood as well as their ability to survive despite severe caloric restriction," said Schork.
For now that's just a hypothesis, which Schork emphasized should be investigated further with more gene association studies and more studies of EPHX2 variants' biological effects.
The study was funded principally by the Price Foundation of Switzerland.
"It was a long and difficult study and the foundation was very gracious and patient, and that was important," Schork said.
INFORMATION:
Other funding came from the National Institutes of Health (e.g., grant 5 UL1 RR025774). For more information, see http://www.nature.com/mp/journal/vaop/ncurrent/abs/mp201391a.html
In addition to Schork, Kaye, Scott-Van Zeeland, Shih, Bergen, Berretini and Magistreti, contributors to the study, "Evidence for the role of EPHX2 gene variants in anorexia nervosa," about 40 other scientists from: The Scripps Translational Science Institute of TSRI and Scripps Health (La Jolla, California); UC San Diego; Tulane University (New Orleans, Louisiana); University of Maryland School of Medicine (Baltimore); University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; Roseneck Hospital for Behavioral Medicine (Prien, Germany); Weill Cornell Medical College (White Plains, New York); Eating Recovery Center (Denver, Colorado); Center for Addiction and Mental Health (Toronto, Canada); Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network (Toronto, Canada); University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (Chapel Hill, NC); Neuropsychiatric Research Institute (Fargo, North Dakota); David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles: University of Pisa (Italy); Guys Hospital, University of London (UK); Florida State University, Tallahassee; Michigan State University, East Lansing; Argosy University (Washington, DC); University of Pittsburgh; University of Lausanne, Switzerland; SRI International (Menlo Park, CA); University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
International study provides new genetic clue to anorexia
2013-09-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Trauma centers serving mostly white patients have lower death rates for patients of all races
2013-09-11
Nearly 80 percent of trauma centers in the United States that serve predominantly minority patients have higher-than-expected death rates, according to new Johns Hopkins research. Moreover, the research shows, trauma patients of all races are 40 percent less likely to die — regardless of the severity of their injuries — if they are treated at hospitals with lower-than-expected mortality rates, the vast majority of which serve predominantly white patients.
The findings, described in an article published in the October issue of Annals of Surgery, offer confirmation and ...
Radiotherapy in girls and the risk of breast cancer later in life
2013-09-11
Exposing young women and girls under the age of 20 to ionizing radiation can substantially raise the risk of their developing breast cancer later in life. Scientists may now know why. A collaborative study, in which Berkeley Lab researchers played a pivotal role, points to increased stem cell self-renewal and subsequent mammary stem cell enrichment as the culprits. Breasts enriched with mammary stem cells as a result of ionizing irradiation during puberty show a later-in-life propensity for developing ER negative tumors - cells that do not have the estrogen receptor. Estrogen ...
Low dose antibiotic treatment of C-difficile as effective as high dose in hospital setting
2013-09-11
NEW YORK (September 11, 2013) – Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) treatment in a hospital setting using low dose oral vancomycin showed similar effectiveness compared to high dose, according to a new study by researchers at Montefiore Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University. These data were presented yesterday at the 53rd Annual Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy meeting in Denver.
Patients with CDI treated with vancomycin at the low dose (LD) (125 mg every 6 hours) and high dose (HD) (greater than ...
Brachytherapy to treat cervical cancer declines in US, treatment associated with higher survival
2013-09-11
Boston, MA – A study by researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) found that brachytherapy treatment was associated with better cause-specific survival and overall survival in women with cervical cancer. The population-based analysis also revealed geographic disparities and decline in brachytherapy treatment in the United States. Brachytherapy is a type of cancer treatment in which radioactive implants are inserted directly into the tissue near the tumor site.
The study is published in the September 2013 issue of The International Journal of Radiation Oncology.
The ...
Iowa State, IBM astronomers explain why disk galaxies eventually look alike
2013-09-11
AMES, Iowa – It happens to all kinds of flat, disk galaxies – whether they're big, little, isolated or crowded in a cluster. They all grow out of their irregular, clumped appearance and their older stars take on the same smooth look, predictably fading from a bright center to a dim edge.
Or, as Curtis Struck, an Iowa State University astronomer, wrote in a research summary: "In galaxy disks, the scars of a rough childhood, and adolescent blemishes, all smooth away with time."
But how does that happen?
Struck, a professor of physics and astronomy who studies galaxy ...
American Chemical Society presidential symposium: Innovation and entrepreneurship
2013-09-11
Contact: Michael Bernstein
m_bernstein@acs.org
317-262-5907 (Indianapolis Press Center, Sept. 6-11)
202-872-6042
Michael Woods
m_woods@acs.org
317-262-5907 (Indianapolis Press Center, Sept. 6-11)
202-872-6293
American Chemical Society
American Chemical Society presidential symposium: Innovation and entrepreneurship
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 10, 2013 — An historic shift is occurring in traditional innovation in chemistry — which touches more than 96 percent of all the world's manufactured goods — away from large companies and toward smaller entrepreneurs ...
High adherence to HIV prophylaxis may raise efficacy for couples where one partner has HIV
2013-09-11
High adherence to antiretroviral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is associated with a high level of protection from HIV acquisition by HIV-uninfected partners in heterosexual couples where only one of the partners is HIV positive, according to a study published in this week's PLOS Medicine.
The study, which was led by Jessica Haberer, from Harvard Medical School, Boston, United States, included 1,147 HIV-uninfected participants who were enrolled in three Ugandan sites of the Partners PrEP Study- a randomized controlled trial to determine efficacy and safety of PrEP. ...
Tobacco companies' interests in smokeless tobacco products in Europe are driven by profit not health
2013-09-11
Transnational tobacco companies' investments in smokeless tobacco products, such as snus (a moist tobacco product that is placed under the upper lip), in Europe are not due to a concern for the health impacts of smoking but are instead driven purely by business interests according to new research by Silvy Peeters and Anna Gilmore from the University of Bath UK and the UK Centre for Tobacco Control Studies, published this week in PLOS Medicine.
To inform the policy debate surrounding snus, which is banned from sale in the European Union (EU) under legislation that is ...
Unisexual reproduction introduces diversity in clonal populations of Cryptococcus neoformans
2013-09-11
A team of researchers led by Professor Joseph Heitman has discovered procreation between genetically identical fungi Cryptococcus neoformans can result in genetic changes and diversity in their offspring, lending insight into how they can evolve to cause and spread disease. These results are published 10 September 2013 in the open access journal PLOS Biology.
"These studies turn our view of the functions of sex by 180 degrees and reveal that sex doesn't just mix up already existing genetic diversity, but can actually create it from scratch," said Professor Heitman, Chair ...
Fungal sex can generate new drug resistant, virulent strains
2013-09-11
DURHAM, N.C. -- Though some might disagree, most biologists think the purpose of sex is to create diversity among offspring. Such diversity underpins evolution, enabling organisms to acquire new combinations of traits to adapt to their environment.
However, scientists have been perplexed to find that many fungi and microorganisms procreate with exact replicas of themselves, where the expected outcome would simply be more of the same.
Now researchers have found the act of sex between such genetically identical organisms can itself be mutagenic, meaning it can create ...