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Neural correlates of NOS1 ex1f-VNTR allelic variation in panic disorder and agoraphobia during fear conditioning and extinction in fMRI

Authors :
Sabine Herterich
Hans-Ulrich Wittchen
Ulrike Lueken
Tilo Kircher
Benjamin Straube
Andreas Ströhle
Isabelle C. Ridderbusch
Volker Arolt
Andreas Reif
Heike Weber
Bettina Pfleiderer
Yunbo Yang
Source :
NeuroImage : Clinical, NeuroImage: Clinical, Vol 27, Iss, Pp 102268-(2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Highlights • NOS1 ex1f-VNTR is associated with neural correlates during fear extinction learning. • Differential effects are prominent in amygdala and hippocampus. • Patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia differ from healthy controls. • Genotype associated effects were not altered after cognitive behavioral therapy.<br />Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (NOS-I) impacts on fear/anxiety-like behavior in animals. In humans, the short (S) allele of a functional promotor polymorphism of NOS1 (NOS1 ex1f-VNTR) has been shown to be associated with higher anxiety and altered fear conditioning in healthy subjects in the amygdala and hippocampus (AMY/HIPP). Here, we explore the role of NOS1 ex1f-VNTR as a pathophysiological correlate of panic disorder and agoraphobia (PD/AG). In a sub-sample of a multicenter cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) randomized controlled trial in patients with PD/AG (n = 48: S/S-genotype n=15, S/L-genotype n=21, L/L-genotype n=12) and healthy control subjects, HS (n = 34: S/S-genotype n=7, S/L-genotype n=17, L/L-genotype=10), a differential fear conditioning and extinction fMRI-paradigm was used to investigate how NOS1 ex1f-VNTR genotypes are associated with differential neural activation in AMY/HIPP. Prior to CBT, L/L-allele carriers showed higher activation than S/S-allele carriers in AMY/HIPP. A genotype × diagnosis interaction revealed that the S-allele in HS was associated with a pronounced deactivation in AMY/HIPP, while patients showed contrary effects. The interaction of genotype × stimulus type (CS+, conditioned stimulus associated with an aversive stimulus vs. CS-, unassociated) showed effects on differential learning in AMY/HIPP. All effects were predominately found during extinction. Genotype associated effects in patients were not altered after CBT. Low statistical power due to small sample size in each subgroup is a major limitation. However, our findings provide first preliminary evidence for dysfunctional neural fear conditioning/extinction associated with NOS1 ex1f-VNTR genotype in the context of PD/AG, shedding new light on the complex interaction between genetic risk, current psychopathology and treatment-related effects.

Details

ISSN :
22131582
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NeuroImage: Clinical
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1ad00e1f0f71c12b739a17bcc86dcf78
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102268