Genetic variants and abnormal processing of pre-miR-182, a circadian clock modulator, in major depression patients with late insomnia.
Saus. Ester E; Soria. Virginia V; Escaramís. Geòrgia G; Vivarelli. Francesca F; Crespo. José M JM; Kagerbauer. Birgit B; Menchón. José Manuel JM; Urretavizcaya. Mikel M; Gratacòs. Mònica M; Estivill. Xavier X
Key Findings
- The T allele of rs76481776 in pre‑miR‑182 is significantly associated with late insomnia in depressed patients.
- Mutated pre‑miR‑182 leads to higher miR‑182 levels compared to the normal version.
- Higher miR‑182 reduces expression of target genes such as DSIP, CLOCK, and ADCY6.
Practical Outcomes
- People with this genetic variant might have lower natural DSIP production, which could contribute to insomnia. However, the study does not provide any dosage, supplement, or protocol guidance, so biohackers cannot directly apply this finding to improve sleep without further research.
Summary
The study found that a common genetic change (the T version of rs76481776) in the DNA that makes a tiny regulator called miR‑182 is linked to trouble sleeping (late insomnia) in people with major depression. This change makes more miR‑182, which then lowers the activity of several genes, including the one that makes the sleep‑related peptide DSIP. In short, a genetic tweak may reduce DSIP levels and disturb sleep rhythms.
Abstract
Previous studies in mice have reported five different microRNAs (miRNAs; miR-219-1/132/183/96/182) to be modulators of the endogenous circadian clock and have presented experimental evidence for some of the genes involved in the molecular clock machinery as target sites. Moreover, disruption of circadian rhythms has long been implicated in the pathophysiology of major depression (MD). We investigated these miRNAs and some of their target sites at the sequence and functional levels as possible predisposing factors for susceptibility to MD and related chronobiological subphenotypes. Mutational screening was performed in a sample of 359 MD patients and 341 control individuals. We found a significant association between the T allele of the rs76481776 polymorphism in the pre-miR-182 and late insomnia in MD patients. Previous studies have reported an association between insomnia and CLOCK gene, a predicted miR-182 target site. A significant overexpression of miR-182 was detected by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction in cells transfected with the mutated form of the pre-miR-182 when compared with wild-type form. Moreover, a significant reduction in luciferase activity of plasmids with 3' UTR of ADCY6, CLOCK and DSIP genes was shown when transfecting cells with the mutated form of pre-miR-182 compared with cells that did not express miR-182. These data indicate that abnormal processing of pre-miR-182 in patients carrying the T allele of the rs76481776 polymorphism may contribute to the dysregulation of circadian rhythms in MD patients with insomnia, which could influence expression levels of the mature form of miR-182 and might increase downregulation in some of its target genes.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-07-23T00:00:00.000Z
10.1093/hmg/ddq316
158
51