I think you've listed the wrong SNP here, since rs12939757 isn't on the MTHFD1 gene.
Yes, I had the wrong SNP in at first and I missed getting it changed in that one spot. It's supposed to be rs11627387. Sorry about that.
What do you mean by "loss of function"? Why do you believe that rs11627387 is having a significant impact? What's the basis for suggesting that oxidative stress specifically interacts with this non-coding SNP?
This study found that it is associated with increased risk for heart defects (at least in hispanic women). I take this to be evidence that it is a loss of function change although perhaps that is slim evidence. I am planning to talk about my reasons for believing that it might be significant soon in another post to start a new thread because it is pretty complicated, but basically loss of
function in MTHFD1 has been found to cause problems with thymidylate synthesis and methionine recycling (in a real person, not in a rat or mouse). Since MTHFD1 requires NADPH to go in the direction of 5,10-methyleneTHF, which is needed for thymidlylate and methionine synthesis, it seems logical to me that oxidative stress, which will drain NADPH, could increase the negative effects of loss of function mutations in MTHFD1. This SNP is only one of the possible SNP's involved. I would imagine that a person could have more than one SNP affecting the pathway, and that multiple SNP's would increase the effect.
I am particularly interested in this SNP because my son with depression is AA for this SNP and I suspect that my son with schizophrenia is AA, too, because our 3rd son is AA, (our daughter is AG, and I am AG, but I suspect that my husband is AA.) I believe that my sons' problems are caused by loss of function SNP's in the MTHFD1 pathway, and this is the only one that I can find that they have homozygous mutations on, so far, for which I have evidence of loss of function. I am planning to explain about this in the other post when I can get it together.