| Literature DB >> 30458022 |
Aldo Córdova-Palomera1,2, Helena Palma-Gudiel1,2, Jaume Forés-Martos2,3, Rafael Tabarés-Seisdedos2,3, Lourdes Fañanás1,2.
Abstract
Recent discoveries highlight the importance of stochastic epigenetic changes, as indexed by epigenetic outlier DNA methylation signatures, as a valuable tool to understand aberrant cell function and subsequent human pathology. There is evidence of such changes in different complex disorders as diverse as cancer, obesity and, to a lesser extent, depression. The current study was aimed at identifying outlying DNA methylation signatures of depressive psychopathology. Here, genome-wide DNA methylation levels were measured (by means of Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation450 Beadchip) in peripheral blood of thirty-four monozygotic twins informative for depressive psychopathology (lifetime DSM-IV diagnoses). This dataset was explored to identify outlying epigenetic signatures of depression, operationalized as extreme hyper- or hypo-methylation in affected co-twins from discordant pairs that is not observed across the rest of the study sample. After adjusting for blood cell count, there were thirteen CpG sites across which depressed co-twins from the discordant pairs exhibited outlying DNA methylation signatures. None of them exhibited a methylation outlier profile in the concordant and healthy pairs, and some of these loci spanned genes previously associated with neuropsychiatric phenotypes, such as GHSR and KCNQ1. This exploratory study provides preliminary proof-of-concept validation that epigenetic outlier profiles derived from genome-wide DNA methylation data may be related to depression risk.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30458022 PMCID: PMC6245788 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0207754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Sixteen DNA methylation probes across the genome exhibit larger methylation variance in the depression-affected co-twins than in their healthy counterparts.
The statistical significance of these p-values is already adjusted for multiple comparisons using the FDR protocol proposed by Storey and Tibshirani (2003).
Fig 2CpG probes with large and statistically significant DNA methylation variances in the diagnostic-discordant MZ twins.
The thirteen probes displayed here are those with genome-wide statistically significant methylation variance increases in affected co-twins from the discordant pairs. PairID: randomly assigned pair number.
DNA methylation probes showing outlier distributions in the affected co-twins from the six adult MZ pairs discordant for depression, and potential neuropsychiatric relevance of their associated genes.
| Probe name (TargetID) | Unadjusted | Adjusted | Mean methylation (SD) | Coordinates (hg19) | Gene name | Gene region | Brain-blood methylation correlation* | Potential relevance of the gene in neuropsychiatric disorders | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| cg00002719 | 9×10−7 | 0.039 | 34.8 | 1.7 | 33.2 | 3.9 | Chr1:169396706 | TSS200 | None | ||
| cg00100121 | 3×10−6 | 0.049 | 42.1 | 2.2 | 39.9 | 3.6 | Chr1:169396635 | 1stExon; | Cerebellum correlation (p = 0.02) | ||
| cg08104202 | 4×10−6 | 0.049 | 35.1 | 2 | 33 | 8.4 | Chr1:169396712 | TSS200 | None | ||
| cg05100739 | 4×10−6 | 0.049 | 15.3 | 1 | 14.4 | 5.7 | Chr17:72733163 | TSS200; | None | Gene expression correlated with brain resting-state oscillatory activity[ | |
| cg08530065 | 2×10−6 | 0.042 | 22.5 | 1.3 | 21.3 | 86.6 | Chr13:39980228 | Body | None | Epigenetic regulation of brain function after prenatal insults[ | |
| cg10717290 | 3×10−7 | 0.034 | 25.6 | 1 | 24.6 | 9.2 | Chr7:119913576 | TSS200 | Prefrontal cortex (p = 0.03) and cerebellum (p = 0.02) correlations | Suggestive evidence of an etiological role in autism[ | |
| cg11796442 | 2×10−6 | 0.049 | 35.2 | 1.8 | 33.4 | 17.8 | Chr5:72593919 | - | - | None | - |
| cg12469257 | 3×10−6 | 0.049 | 19.2 | 1.2 | 18 | 88.5 | Chr3:25761040 | 3'UTR; | None | Association with intellectual disability, neuromotor impairment and neuropathy[ | |
| cg15240852 | 3×10−6 | 0.049 | 17.2 | 1 | 16.2 | 90.9 | Chr3:131083585 | Body | None | - | |
| cg22058112 | 1×10−6 | 0.041 | 15.9 | 1 | 15.2 | 7.4 | Chr15:42566300 | TSS1500; | None | - | |
| cg22070855 | 8×10−7 | 0.039 | 32.9 | 1.6 | 31.3 | 17.4 | Chr3:172167527 | TSS1500 | Prefrontal cortex (p < 0.001), entorhinal cortex (p = 0.02) and superior temporal gyrus (p < 0.001) correlations | Association with substance abuse[ | |
| cg24599017 | 1×10−7 | 0.03 | 14.6 | 0.4 | 14.2 | 96.3 | Chr5:178835885 | - | - | None | - |
| cg24932449 | 4×10−6 | 0.049 | 26.2 | 1.6 | 24.7 | 91.5 | Chr11:2672613 | Body; | Prefrontal cortex correlation (p = 0.03) | Putative link with working memory, psychopathology and brain activity[ |
Note that no SNPs have been described in any of the CpG sites exhibiting outlier distributions. *Brain-blood correlations were retrieved from the Blood Brain DNA Methylation Comparison Tool, a publicly available database [56].
Abbreviations: TargetID, Illumina identifier; 1stExon, first exon; 5’UTR, 5’ untranslated region; Body, within gene body; TSS200, within 200 bp of a TSS.
Fig 3Assessment of DNA methylation levels in diagnostic-concordant and healthy pairs at the 13 CpG probes with epigenetic outlier profiles in affected co-twins from discordant pairs.
The thirteen probes displayed here are those with genome-wide statistically significant methylation variance increases in affected co-twins from the discordant pairs (see Fig 2). PairID: randomly assigned pair number.
Psychopathological, neurocognitive and demographic variables for DSM-IV diagnostic concordant, discordant and healthy MZ twin pairs.
| CONCORDANT | DISCORDANT | HEALTHY | Group comparison | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Range | Mean (SD) | Range | Mean (SD) | Range | X-squared | |
| 42.5 (13) | 22–54 | 37 (10.9) | 20–50 | 30.3 (7.3) | 19–39 | 5.9; 0.052 | |
| 105.1 (12.5) | 87–127 | 108.1 (11.8) | 87–131 | 110.5 (5.5) | 103–118 | 1.9; 0.393 | |
| 27.9 (16.5) | 6–57 | 20.9 (13.3) | 4–45 | 10.6 (9.3) | 1–33 | 8.7; 0.013 | |
| 6.9 (6.5) | 1–20 | 3.5 (2.7) | 0–9 | 1.7 (1.8) | 0–6 | 6.4; 0.04 | |
Subjects from discordant twin pairs exhibit intermediate BSI scores (as compared with subjects from healthy or concordant groups) since they constitute a 50% of affected and a 50% of non-affected subjects (their individual scores being averaged).
Notes: SD, standard deviation; IQ, intellectual quotient; BSI, Brief Symptom Inventory
, Kruskal-Wallis X-squared, as these variables were continuous
*, statistically significant p-value.