An epigenome-wide association study of posttraumatic stress disorder in US veterans implicates several new DNA methylation loci.

dc.contributor.author

Logue, Mark W

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Miller, Mark W

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Wolf, Erika J

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Huber, Bertrand Russ

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Morrison, Filomene G

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Zhou, Zhenwei

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Zheng, Yuanchao

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Smith, Alicia K

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Daskalakis, Nikolaos P

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Ratanatharathorn, Andrew

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Uddin, Monica

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Nievergelt, Caroline M

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Ashley-Koch, Allison E

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Baker, Dewleen G

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Beckham, Jean C

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Garrett, Melanie E

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Boks, Marco P

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Geuze, Elbert

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Grant, Gerald A

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Hauser, Michael A

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Kessler, Ronald C

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Kimbrel, Nathan A

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Maihofer, Adam X

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Marx, Christine E

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Qin, Xue-Jun

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Risbrough, Victoria B

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Rutten, Bart PF

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Stein, Murray B

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Ursano, Robert J

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Vermetten, Eric

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Vinkers, Christiaan H

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Ware, Erin B

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Stone, Annjanette

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Schichman, Steven A

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McGlinchey, Regina E

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Milberg, William P

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Hayes, Jasmeet P

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Verfaellie, Mieke

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Traumatic Stress Brain Study Group

dc.date.accessioned

2022-09-30T17:53:38Z

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2022-09-30T17:53:38Z

dc.date.issued

2020-03

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2022-09-30T17:53:37Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

Previous studies using candidate gene and genome-wide approaches have identified epigenetic changes in DNA methylation (DNAm) associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Methods

In this study, we performed an EWAS of PTSD in a cohort of Veterans (n = 378 lifetime PTSD cases and 135 controls) from the Translational Research Center for TBI and Stress Disorders (TRACTS) cohort assessed using the Illumina EPIC Methylation BeadChip which assesses DNAm at more than 850,000 sites throughout the genome. Our model included covariates for ancestry, cell heterogeneity, sex, age, and a smoking score based on DNAm at 39 smoking-associated CpGs. We also examined in EPIC-based DNAm data generated from pre-frontal cortex (PFC) tissue from the National PTSD Brain Bank (n = 72).

Results

The analysis of blood samples yielded one genome-wide significant association with PTSD at cg19534438 in the gene G0S2 (p = 1.19 × 10-7, padj = 0.048). This association was replicated in an independent PGC-PTSD-EWAS consortium meta-analysis of military cohorts (p = 0.0024). We also observed association with the smoking-related locus cg05575921 in AHRR despite inclusion of a methylation-based smoking score covariate (p = 9.16 × 10-6), which replicates a previously observed PGC-PTSD-EWAS association (Smith et al. 2019), and yields evidence consistent with a smoking-independent effect. The top 100 EWAS loci were then examined in the PFC data. One of the blood-based PTSD loci, cg04130728 in CHST11, which was in the top 10 loci in blood, but which was not genome-wide significant, was significantly associated with PTSD in brain tissue (in blood p = 1.19 × 10-5, padj = 0.60, in brain, p = 0.00032 with the same direction of effect). Gene set enrichment analysis of the top 500 EWAS loci yielded several significant overlapping GO terms involved in pathogen response, including "Response to lipopolysaccharide" (p = 6.97 × 10-6, padj = 0.042).

Conclusions

The cross replication observed in independent cohorts is evidence that DNA methylation in peripheral tissue can yield consistent and replicable PTSD associations, and our results also suggest that that some PTSD associations observed in peripheral tissue may mirror associations in the brain.
dc.identifier

10.1186/s13148-020-0820-0

dc.identifier.issn

1868-7075

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1868-7083

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25893

dc.language

eng

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Clinical epigenetics

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10.1186/s13148-020-0820-0

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Traumatic Stress Brain Study Group

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Frontal Lobe

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Humans

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Genetic Predisposition to Disease

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Sulfotransferases

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Cell Cycle Proteins

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Repressor Proteins

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Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis

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Case-Control Studies

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Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic

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DNA Methylation

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Epigenesis, Genetic

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Veterans

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United States

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Female

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Male

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Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors

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Genome-Wide Association Study

dc.title

An epigenome-wide association study of posttraumatic stress disorder in US veterans implicates several new DNA methylation loci.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Ashley-Koch, Allison E|0000-0001-5409-9155

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Beckham, Jean C|0000-0001-8746-8949

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Grant, Gerald A|0000-0002-2651-4603

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Kimbrel, Nathan A|0000-0001-7218-1005

pubs.begin-page

46

pubs.issue

1

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Duke

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Sanford School of Public Policy

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School of Medicine

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Basic Science Departments

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Clinical Science Departments

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Institutes and Centers

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Biostatistics & Bioinformatics

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Molecular Genetics and Microbiology

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Medicine

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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Medicine, Nephrology

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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University Institutes and Centers

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Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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Duke Molecular Physiology Institute

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Psychiatry, Child & Family Mental Health & Community Psychiatry

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Neurosurgery

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Center for Child and Family Policy

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Behavioral Medicine & Neurosciences

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

12

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