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DNA methylation meta-analysis reveals cellular alterations in psychosis and markers of treatment-resistant schizophrenia

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-12, 17:14 authored by Eilis Hannon, Kieran MurphyKieran Murphy, John WaddingtonJohn Waddington, Jonathan Mill
We performed a systematic analysis of blood DNA methylation profiles from 4,483 participants from seven independent cohorts identifying differentially methylated positions (DMPs) associated with psychosis, schizophrenia and treatment-resistant schizophrenia. Psychosis cases were characterized by significant differences in measures of blood cell proportions and elevated smoking exposure derived from the DNA methylation data, with the largest differences seen in treatment-resistant schizophrenia patients. We implemented a stringent pipeline to meta-analyze epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) results across datasets, identifying 95 DMPs associated with psychosis and 1,048 DMPs associated with schizophrenia, with evidence of colocalization to regions nominated by genetic association studies of disease. Many schizophrenia-associated DNA methylation differences were only present in patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia, potentially reflecting exposure to the atypical antipsychotic clozapine. Our results highlight how DNA methylation data can be leveraged to identify physiological (e.g., differential cell counts) and environmental (e.g., smoking) factors associated with psychosis and molecular biomarkers of treatment-resistant schizophrenia.

Funding

UK Medical Research Council MR/K013807/1 and MR/R005176/1

Medical Research Council Clinical Research Infrastructure Funding (MR/M008924/1)

Karolinska Institutet ALF 20090183 and 20100305

National Institutes of Health R01 MH52857

National Institute of Mental Health R01MH077139

Finland Centre of Excellence in Complex Disease Genetics 213506 and 129680

Academy of Finland 265240, 263278 and 312073

Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsra° det D0886501)

European Union 7th Framework Programme 279227

Medical Research Council Fellowship (MR/M008436/1)

National Institute for Health Research RP-PG-0606-1049

Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research VIDI grant (number 91718336)

History

Data Availability Statement

Raw and processed data for the UCL, Aberdeen and Dublin cohorts are available through GEO accession numbers GSE84727, GSE80417, and GSE147221, respectively.

Comments

The original article is available at https://elifesciences.org/

Published Citation

Hannon E. et al. DNA methylation meta-analysis reveals cellular alterations in psychosis and markers of treatment-resistant schizophrenia. Elife. 2021;10:e58430.

Publication Date

26 February 2021

PubMed ID

33646943

Department/Unit

  • Beaumont Hospital
  • Psychiatry
  • School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences

Research Area

  • Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)