| Literature DB >> 25781172 |
Dimitrios Avramopoulos1, Brad D Pearce2, John McGrath3, Paula Wolyniec3, Ruihua Wang3, Nicole Eckart4, Alexandros Hatzimanolis3, Fernando S Goes3, Gerald Nestadt3, Jennifer Mulle2, Karen Coneely5, Myfanwy Hopkins2, Ingo Ruczinski6, Robert Yolken7, Ann E Pulver3.
Abstract
Inflammation and maternal or fetal infections have been suggested as risk factors for schizophrenia (SZ) and bipolar disorder (BP). It is likely that such environmental effects are contingent on genetic background. Here, in a genome-wide approach, we test the hypothesis that such exposures increase the risk for SZ and BP and that the increase is dependent on genetic variants. We use genome-wide genotype data, plasma IgG antibody measurements against Toxoplasma gondii, Herpes simplex virus type 1, Cytomegalovirus, Human Herpes Virus 6 and the food antigen gliadin as well as measurements of C-reactive protein (CRP), a peripheral marker of inflammation. The subjects are SZ cases, BP cases, parents of cases and screened controls. We look for higher levels of our immunity/infection variables and interactions between them and common genetic variation genome-wide. We find many of the antibody measurements higher in both disorders. While individual tests do not withstand correction for multiple comparisons, the number of nominally significant tests and the comparisons showing the expected direction are in significant excess (permutation p=0.019 and 0.004 respectively). We also find CRP levels highly elevated in SZ, BP and the mothers of BP cases, in agreement with existing literature, but possibly confounded by our inability to correct for smoking or body mass index. In our genome-wide interaction analysis no signal reached genome-wide significance, yet many plausible candidate genes emerged. In a hypothesis driven test, we found multiple interactions among SZ-associated SNPs in the HLA region on chromosome 6 and replicated an interaction between CMV infection and genotypes near the CTNNA3 gene reported by a recent GWAS. Our results support that inflammatory processes and infection may modify the risk for psychosis and suggest that the genotype at SZ-associated HLA loci modifies the effect of these variables on the risk to develop SZ.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25781172 PMCID: PMC4363491 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0116696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Infection and inflammation related variables explored in this study.
| Antibodies | Assay | Purpose of test | Proposed relevance to SCZ and BP (based on current literature) |
|---|---|---|---|
| TOXO | ELISA detecting IgG antibodies against Toxoplasma | An indicator of past infection with this persistent parasite. IgG may also increase upon reactivation of existing infection, or infection with another serotype. | Infection modulates neurotransmitters, including dopamine; and seropositivity is associated with SCZ and BP. |
| HSV1 | ELISA to detect IgG antibodies to Herpes Simplex virus type 1 | An indicator of past and current infection. Levels increase upon reactivation of latent infection. | Infection or titers associated with cognitive deficits and neuroimaging findings in SCZ and BP. |
| CMV | ELISA detecting IgG antibody to Cytomegalovirus | An indicator infection. Levels increase upon reactivation of this latent infection. | Higher titers correlate with cognitive deficits of SCZ and BP, though a diagnosis of SCZ may correlate with lower titers. |
| HHV6 | ELISA detecting IgG antibody Human Herpesvirus 6 | Indicates infection with this persistent neurotropic virus. | May be negatively or positively correlated with SCZ prevalence, perhaps due to stage of infection, virus type (HHV-6A or HHV6B), or immunogenetic factors. |
| GLIADIN | Measures IgG antibodies to gliadin, a gluten protein | Increases in antibodies to gliadin are found in celiac disease. | Increased rate of celiac disease in schizophrenia, which may inform the autoimmune component of SCZ. |
| Acute phase reactant | |||
| CRP | Sandwich-based ELISA for quantitation of human C-reactive protein levels | Higher levels indicates chronic inflammatory state. May also reflect neuroinflammation. | CRP levels are significantly increased in SCZ and unipolar depression, and possibly BP. |
See text for references on the relevance to SCZ and BP.
Fig 1Density plots showing the distribution of the log-transformed residuals of our variables.
Anti-CMV, anti-HSV1 and anti-TOXO show clearly bimodal distributions and were transformed to binary variables. An arrow indicates the transformation threshold.
Effect size (beta) and standard errors of effects of 5 antibodies and CRP.
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| β ± S.E (p) | β ± S.E (p) | β ± S.E (p) | β ± S.E (p) | β ± S.E (p) | β ± S.E (p) | |
| TOXO | -0.02±0.2 (n/a) | 0.30±0.23 (0.095) | 0.09±0.25 (n.s.) | 0.04±0.21 (n.s.) | 0.1±0.23 (n.s.) | 0.04±0.25 (n.s.) |
| HSV1 | -0.20±0.16 (n/a) | 0.23±0.19 (n.s.) | 0.43±0.22 | 0.24±0.16 (0.07) | 0.48±0.18 | 0.41±0.21 |
| CMV | -0.01±0.17 (n/a) | 0.19±0.2 (n.s.) | 0.65±0.23 | 0.26±0.17 (0.06) | 0.19±0.19 (0.06) | 0.48±0.22 |
| HHV6 | 0.12±0.09 (0.07) | 0.17±0.11 (0.07) | 0.20±0.14 (0.07) | 0.19±0.09 | 0.06±0.11 (n.s.) | 0.12±0.14 (n.s.) |
| GLIADIN | 0.07±0.08 (n.s.) | -0.10±0.10 (n/a) | 0.02±0.12 (n.s.) | 0.04±0.08 (n.s.) | 0.07±0.10 (n.s.) | 0.04±0.11 (n.s.) |
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| CRP | 1.04±0.12 | 0.25±0.16 (0.06) | 0.05±0.17 (n.s.) | 0.42±0.14 | 0.44±0.15 | 0.20±0.16 (n.s.) |
All comparisons are with controls. P-values are 1-tailed; only p<0.1 are shown; nominally significant p-values are in bold; n.s. = not significant; n.a. not applicable because direction is opposite from the expected.
Genes showing suggestive interactions with antibody levels.
| Phenotype | Interactor | SNP ID | Chr. | position (hg19) | p-value | Refseq genes within 200 Kb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BP | anti-CMV | rs6479352 | 9 | 94281709 | 8.1E-06 | ROR2, |
| BP | anti-CMV | rs9910816 | 17 | 69281765 | 2.0E-06 | none |
| BP | anti-HSV1 | rs885553 | 2 | 45456389 | 7.9E-07 | LINC01121, SRBD1 |
| BP | anti-HSV1 | rs4234848 | 4 | 80850804 | 3.6E-06 | ANTXR2, PCAT4 |
| BP | anti-HSV1 | rs3736986 | 9 | 36194568 | 6.2E-06 |
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| SZ | anti-CMV | rs11871847 | 17 | 66344702 | 6.1E-06 | CASC17 |
| SZ | anti-HSV1 | rs10170846 | 2 | 223517704 | 2.3E-06 | FARSB, MOGAT1, SGPP2 |
| SZ | anti-HSV1 | rs12369635 | 12 | 129561355 | 8.3E-06 | TMEM132D, GLT1D1 |
| SZ | anti-TOXO | rs1009840 | 6 | 134546684 | 8.1E-06 |
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Genes with significant functional evidence are in bold (see text).