| Literature DB >> 30390684 |
Julius C Pape1, Tania Carrillo-Roa1, Barbara O Rothbaum2, Charles B Nemeroff3, Darina Czamara1, Anthony S Zannas1,4, Dan Iosifescu5,6,7, Sanjay J Mathew8, Thomas C Neylan9,10, Helen S Mayberg2, Boadie W Dunlop2, Elisabeth B Binder11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We have previously evaluated the efficacy of the CRF1 receptor antagonist GSK561679 in female PTSD patients. While GSK561679 was not superior to placebo overall, it was associated with a significantly stronger symptom reduction in a subset of patients with probable CRF system hyperactivity, i.e., patients with child abuse and CRHR1 SNP rs110402 GG carriers. Here, we test whether blood-based DNA methylation levels within CRHR1 and other PTSD-relevant genes would be associated with treatment outcome, either overall or in the high CRF activity subgroup.Entities:
Keywords: CRF1 receptor antagonist; CRHR1; DNA methylation; Epigenetics; FKBP5; NR3C1; PTSD
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30390684 PMCID: PMC6215613 DOI: 10.1186/s13148-018-0569-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
Fig. 1The boxplots describe the mean change of CRHR1 methylation (top tertile of the most variable CpGs from pre- to post-treatment) in abused and non-abused patients treated with GSK561679 or placebo. GG carriers are shown in blue (plain boxes) and AA/AG in red (striped boxes). Positive values correspond to an increase, whereas negative values correspond to a decrease in methylation from baseline to endpoint. Dots indicate outliers. Three-way interaction of treatment × rs110402 A carrier status × child abuse was significantly associated with mean methylation change (n = 57; p = 0.033) (a, b). After treatment stratification, there was a significant interaction effect of rs110402 A carrier status and child abuse on mean methylation change in subjects treated with GSK561679 (n = 28; p = 0.00005) (a) but not with placebo (n = 29; p > 0.05) (b)
Fig. 2The scatter plots describe the association between the mean percent change of PTSD symptoms and mean NR3C1 methylation dependent on child abuse in patients treated with GSK561679 (a, c) or placebo (b, d). Higher symptom percent change corresponds to improvement (reduction) in PTSD symptoms from baseline to endpoint. Abused patients are shown in red (solid line) and non-abused patients in blue (dashed line). Three-way interaction of NR3C1 baseline methylation × treatment × child abuse was significantly associated with PSS %-change (n = 79; p = 0.044) (a, b) but not with CAPS %-change (n = 78; p > 0.05) (c, d). After treatment stratification, there was a significant interaction effect of baseline methylation and child abuse on PSS %-change in subjects treated with GSK561679 (n = 38; p = 0.045) (a) but not with placebo (n = 40; p > 0.05) (b). For CAPS %-change, the effect pointed in the same direction without reaching significance (c, d)
Fig. 3The scatter plots describe the association between the mean percent change of PTSD symptoms and mean FKBP5 methylation dependent on child abuse in patients treated with GSK561679 (a, c) or placebo (b, d). Higher symptom percent change corresponds to improvement (reduction) in PTSD symptoms from baseline to endpoint. Abused patients are shown in red (solid line) and non-abused patients in blue (dashed line). The three-way interaction testing FKBP5 baseline methylation × treatment × child abuse on CAPS %-change had a p value of p = 0.099 with an n = 79 (c, d) and p > 0.05 with PSS %-change (n = 78) (a, b). After treatment stratification, there was no significant interaction effect of baseline methylation by child abuse on PTSD symptom %-change in neither one of the treatment groups (p > 0.05 for all) (a–d)