Objective: As evidence of partial aetiological overlap between bipolar affective disorder and schizophrenia is accumulating, it is important to determine whether genes implicated in the aetiology of schizophrenia play a role in bipolar disorder, and vice versa. As the neuregulin 1 (NRG1) gene has been associated with schizophrenia, we set out to investigate whether it is also associated with bipolar affective disorder, using a sample from Scotland, UK.
Methods: We tested four single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), SNP8NRG221533 (rs35753505), SNP8NRG241930, SNP8NRG243177 (rs6994992) and SNPNRG222662 (rs4623364) for allelic and haplotypic association with bipolar disorder and the presence of psychotic or mood-incongruent psychotic features.
Results: We found nominal allele-wise significant association (P = 0.02) for SNP8NRG221533, with the T allele being overrepresented in cases. This is the opposite allelic association to the original association study where the C allele was associated with schizophrenia. Allele-wise significance increased when we tested for association with the subgroups of bipolar disorder with psychotic features (chi2 = 8.53; P = 0.003; odds ratio = 1.49) and, more specifically, with mood-incongruent psychotic features (chi2 = 7.13; P = 0.008; odds ratio = 1.57). Furthermore, both these subphenotypes were significantly associated with the SNP8NRG221533(T)-SNP8NRG241930(G) haplotype (chi2 = 11.94, global P = 0.027 and chi2 = 11.88, global P = 0.019, respectively) and with the SNP8NRG221533(T)-SNP8NRG222662(C)-SNP8NRG241930(G) haplotype (chi2 = 19.98, global P = 0.009) in case of the broader subphenotype of psychotic bipolar.
Conclusion: This study supports the hypothesis that NRG1 may play a role in the development of bipolar disorder, especially in psychotic subtypes, albeit with different alleles to previous association reports in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.