A single gene defect causing claustrophobia

2013 | journal article

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​A single gene defect causing claustrophobia​
El-Kordi, A. ; Kästner, A. ; Grube, S.; Klugmann, M. ; Begemann, M. ; Sperling, S.   & Hammerschmidt, K.  et al.​ (2013) 
Translational Psychiatry3 art. e254​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/tp.2013.28 

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Authors
El-Kordi, Ahmed ; Kästner, Anne ; Grube, Sabrina; Klugmann, M. ; Begemann, Martin ; Sperling, Swetlana ; Hammerschmidt, Kurt ; Hammer, Christian ; Stepniak, Beata ; Patzig, Julia ; Monasterio-Schrader, P. D. ; Strenzke, N. ; Flügge, G. ; Werner, Hauke B. ; Pawlak, R.; Nave, Klaus-Armin ; Ehrenreich, Hannelore 
Abstract
Claustrophobia, the well-known fear of being trapped in narrow/closed spaces, is often considered a conditioned response to traumatic experience. Surprisingly, we found that mutations affecting a single gene, encoding a stress-regulated neuronal protein, can cause claustrophobia. Gpm6a-deficient mice develop normally and lack obvious behavioral abnormalities. However, when mildly stressed by single-housing, these mice develop a striking claustrophobia-like phenotype, which is not inducible in wild-type controls, even by severe stress. The human GPM6A gene is located on chromosome 4q32-q34, a region linked to panic disorder. Sequence analysis of 115 claustrophobic and non-claustrophobic subjects identified nine variants in the noncoding region of the gene that are more frequent in affected individuals (P=0.028). One variant in the 3'untranslated region was linked to claustrophobia in two small pedigrees. This mutant mRNA is functional but cannot be silenced by neuronal miR124 derived itself from a stress-regulated transcript. We suggest that loosing dynamic regulation of neuronal GPM6A expression poses a genetic risk for claustrophobia.
Issue Date
2013
Journal
Translational Psychiatry 
Extent
12
Language
English

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