4.6 Article

A Whole Methylome CpG-SNP Association Study of Psychosis in Blood and Brain Tissue

Journal

SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 1018-1026

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbv182

Keywords

DNA methylation; psychosis; SNPs; MBD-seq; methylome-wide association study; postmortem brain samples

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [RC2MH089996, R03MH102723, R01MH097283]
  2. Stanley Medical Research Institute [08R-1959]

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Mutated CpG sites (CpG-SNPs) are potential hotspots for human diseases because in addition to the sequence variation they may show individual differences in DNA methylation. We performed methylome-wide association studies (MWAS) to test whether methylation differences at those sites were associated with schizophrenia. We assayed all common CpG-SNPs with methyl-CpG binding domain protein-enriched genome sequencing (MBD-seq) using DNA extracted from 1408 blood samples and 66 postmortem brain samples (BA10) of schizophrenia cases and controls. Seven CpG-SNPs passed our FDR threshold of 0.1 in the blood MWAS. Of the CpG-SNPs methylated in brain, 94% were also methylated in blood. This significantly exceeded the 46.2% overlap expected by chance (P-value < 1.0 x 10(-8)) and justified replicating findings from blood in brain tissue. CpG-SNP rs3796293 in IL1RAP replicated (P-value =.003) with the same direction of effects. This site was further validated through targeted bisulfite pyro-sequencing in 736 independent case-control blood samples (P-value < 9.5 x 10(-4)). Our top result in the brain MWAS (P-value = 8.8 x 10(-7)) was CpG-SNP rs16872141 located in the potential promoter of ENC1. Overall, our results suggested that CpG-SNP methylation may reflect effects of environmental insults and can provide biomarkers in blood that could potentially improve disease management.

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