Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a nerve growth factor that has antidepressant-like effects in animals. BDNF gene polymorphisms have been associated with bipolar disorder. We tested two genetic polymorphisms of BDNF for their association with childhood-onset mood disorders (COMD) within the context of a case-control design. Two BDNF polymorphisms, a dinucleotide repeat (GT)(n), and a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the coding region, val66met, were genotyped in 99 adults with a history of COMD and matched psychiatrically healthy controls. A genomic control (GC) method was used to evaluate population substructure. Alleles at (GT)(n) were highly associated with COMD in this sample (chi(2) = 17.8; d.f. = 5; P = 0.0032). The odds of carrying the 168 bp allele were 3.94 times greater for cases than controls (CI = 1.72-9.04). Alleles of val66met were not significantly associated with COMD. GC analysis suggested population substructure was not a confounder of association. Analysis of haplotypes, in which (GT)(n) was treated as a binary variable (long vs. short alleles), provided significant evidence that the haplotype val/short contributes to liability to COMD. The BDNF (GT)(n) marker and the val/short haplotype are associated with COMD in this sample, in accordance with the previously described neurotrophic hypothesis of depression and some previous studies of association for bipolar disorder and neuroticism.