| Literature DB >> 25988933 |
Lynn M Almli1, Jennifer S Stevens1, Alicia K Smith1, Varun Kilaru1, Qian Meng2, Janine Flory3, Duna Abu-Amara4, Rasha Hammamieh5, Ruoting Yang6, Kristina B Mercer1, Elizabeth B Binder1,7, Bekh Bradley1,8, Steven Hamilton9, Marti Jett5, Rachel Yehuda3, Charles R Marmar4, Kerry J Ressler1,10.
Abstract
Genetic factors appear to be highly relevant to predicting differential risk for the development of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In a discovery sample, we conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for PTSD using a small military cohort (Systems Biology PTSD Biomarkers Consortium; SBPBC, N = 147) that was designed as a case-controlled sample of highly exposed, recently returning veterans with and without combat-related PTSD. A genome-wide significant single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), rs717947, at chromosome 4p15 (N = 147, β = 31.34, P = 1.28 × 10(-8) ) was found to associate with the gold-standard diagnostic measure for PTSD (the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale). We conducted replication and follow-up studies in an external sample, a larger urban community cohort (Grady Trauma Project, GTP, N = 2006), to determine the robustness and putative functionality of this risk variant. In the GTP replication sample, SNP rs717947 associated with PTSD diagnosis in females (N = 2006, P = 0.005), but not males. SNP rs717947 was also found to be a methylation quantitative trait locus (meQTL) in the GTP replication sample (N = 157, P = 0.002). Further, the risk allele of rs717947 was associated with decreased medial and dorsolateral cortical activation to fearful faces (N = 53, P < 0.05) in the GTP replication sample. These data identify a genome-wide significant polymorphism conferring risk for PTSD, which was associated with differential epigenetic regulation and with differential cortical responses to fear in a replication sample. These results may provide new insight into understanding genetic and epigenetic regulation of PTSD and intermediate phenotypes that contribute to this disorder.Entities:
Keywords: GWAS; PTSD; epigenetic; fMRI; meQTL
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25988933 PMCID: PMC4844461 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.b.32315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet ISSN: 1552-4841 Impact factor: 3.568