Anti-Epileptic Drug Target Perturbation and Intracranial Aneurysm Risk: Mendelian Randomization and Colocalization Study

Author:

Bakker Mark K.1ORCID,van Straten Tijmen1ORCID,Chong Michael2ORCID,Paré Guillaume2ORCID,Gill Dipender3ORCID,Ruigrok Ynte M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, University Medical Center Utrecht Brain Center, Utrecht University, the Netherlands (M.K.B., T.v.S., Y.M.R.).

2. Population Health Research Institute; Thrombosis and Atherosclerosis Research Institute; Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario (M.C., G.P.).

3. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, United Kingdom (D.G.).

Abstract

Background: In a genome-wide association study of intracranial aneurysms (IA), enrichment was found between genes associated with IA and genes encoding targets of effective anti-epileptic drugs. Our aim was to assess if this pleiotropy is driven by shared disease mechanisms that could potentially highlight a treatment strategy for IA. Methods: Using 2-sample inverse-variance weighted Mendelian randomization and genetic colocalization analyses we assessed: (1) if epilepsy liability in general affects IA risk, and (2) whether changes in gene- and protein-expression levels of anti-epileptic drug targets in blood and arterial tissue may causally affect IA risk. Results: We found no overall effect of epilepsy liability on IA. Expression of 21 genes and 13 proteins corresponding to anti-epileptic drug targets supported a causal effect ( P <0.05) on IA risk. Of those genes and proteins, genetic variants affecting CNNM2 levels showed strong evidence for colocalization with IA risk (posterior probability>70%). Higher CNNM2 levels in arterial tissue were associated with increased IA risk (odds ratio, 3.02; [95% CI, 2.32–3.94]; P =3.39×10 16 ). CNNM2 expression was best proxied by rs11191580. The magnitude of the effect of this variant was greater than would be expected if systemic blood pressure was the sole IA-causing mechanism in this locus. Conclusions: CNNM2 is a driver of the pleiotropy between IA and anti-epileptic drug targets. Administration of the anti-epileptic drugs phenytoin, valproic acid, or carbamazepine may be expected to decrease CNNM2 levels and therefore subsequently decrease IA risk. CNNM2 is therefore an important target to investigate further for its role in the pathogenesis of IA.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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