Objective: Substantial research has shown that anxiety disorders are associated with decreased cardiac vagal tone, which is a known risk factor for cardiac vulnerability. A functional nerve growth factor (NGF) polymorphism (rs6330, c.104C > T, p.Ala35Val) has been associated with anxiety such that in males but not females, T-allele carriers exhibit higher levels of trait anxiety. Here we investigate whether the nonsynonymous NGF variant has an effect on cardiac autonomic control.
Methods: From 705 adults initially screened for medical and psychiatric illnesses, a final cohort of 580 healthy Han Chinese (352 men, 228 women; mean [standard deviation] age = 34.46 [8.45] years) was included in the NGF genotyping (C/C: 428% [73.8%] and T-allele carriers: 152% [26.2%]). Short-term heart rate variability was used to assess cardiac autonomic function.
Results: There were significant genotype-by-sex interaction effects (p < .05) on high-frequency power (HF) and root mean square of successive heartbeat interval differences (RMSSD), both indices of cardiac vagal control. Even after adjusting for possible confounders, men with any T allele showed lower HF and RMSSD compared with men with the C/C genotype. Women, however, showed an opposite but nonsignificant pattern.
Conclusions: The studied NGF polymorphism modulates autonomic outflow to the heart in a sex-dependent manner. The findings support the view that male T-allele carriers are at increased susceptibility for anxiety by association with low vagal activity and suggest a potential sex-specific genetic link between the highly comorbid anxiety disorders and cardiovascular diseases.