Disruptive mutations in the serotonin transporter associate serotonin dysfunction with treatment-resistant affective disorder

Author:

Støier Jonatan Fullerton,Jørgensen Trine Nygaard,Sparsø Thomas,Rasmussen Henrik Berg,Kumar Vivek,Newman Amy Hauck,Blakely Randy D.,Werge Thomas,Gether Ulrik,Herborg Freja

Abstract

ABSTRACTAffective or mood disorders are a leading cause of disability worldwide. The serotonergic system has been heavily implicated in the complex etiology and serves as a therapeutic target. The serotonin transporter (SERT) is a major regulator of serotonin neurotransmission, yet the disease-relevance of impaired SERT function remains unknown. Here, we present the first identification and functional characterization of disruptive coding SERT variants found in patients with psychiatric diseases. In a unique cohort of 144 patients characterized by treatment-resistant chronic affective disorders with a lifetime history of electroconvulsive therapy, we identified two previously uncharacterized coding SERT variants: SERT-N217S and SERT-A500T. Both variants were significantly enriched in the patient cohort compared to GnomAD (SERT-N217S: OR = 151,P= 0.0001 and SERT-A500T: OR = 1348,P= 0.0022) and ethnicity-matched healthy controls (SERT-N217S: OR ≥ 17.7,P≤ 0.013 and SERT-A500T: OR = ∞,P= 0.029). Functional investigations revealed that the mutations exert distinct perturbations to SERT function, but their overall effects converge on a partial loss-of-function molecular phenotype. Thus, the SERT-A500T variant compromises the catalytic activity, while SERT-N217S disrupts proper glycosylation of SERT with a resulting dominant-negative trafficking deficiency. Moreover, we demonstrate that the trafficking deficiency of SERT-N217S is amenable to pharmacochaperoning by noribogaine. Collectively, our findings describe the first disease-associated loss-of-function SERT variants and implicate serotonergic disturbances arising from SERT dysfunction as a risk factor for chronic affective disorders.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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