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  4. Integrated genetic, epigenetic, and gene set enrichment analyses identify NOTCH as a potential mediator for PTSD risk after trauma: Results from two independent African cohorts
 
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Integrated genetic, epigenetic, and gene set enrichment analyses identify NOTCH as a potential mediator for PTSD risk after trauma: Results from two independent African cohorts

Date Issued
2020-01-01
Author(s)
Conrad, Daniela
Wilker, Sarah
Schneider, Anna
Karabatsiakis, Alexander
Pfeiffer, Anett
Kolassa, Stephan
Freytag, Virginie  
Vukojevic, Vanja
Vogler, Christian
Milnik, Annette  
Papassotiropoulos, Andreas  
J.-F de Quervain, Dominique
Elbert, Thomas
Kolassa, Iris-Tatjana
DOI
10.1111/psyp.13288
Abstract
The risk of developing posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) increases with the number of traumatic event types experienced (trauma load) in interaction with other psychobiological risk factors. The NOTCH (neurogenic locus notch homolog proteins) signaling pathway, consisting of four different trans-membrane receptor proteins (NOTCH1-4), constitutes an evolutionarily well-conserved intercellular communication pathway (involved, e.g., in cell-cell interaction, inflammatory signaling, and learning processes). Its association with fear memory consolidation makes it an interesting candidate for PTSD research. We tested for significant associations of common genetic variants of NOTCH1-4 (investigated by microarray) and genomic methylation of saliva-derived DNA with lifetime PTSD risk in independent cohorts from Northern Uganda (N; 1; = 924) and Rwanda (N; 2; = 371), and investigated whether NOTCH-related gene sets were enriched for associations with lifetime PTSD risk. We found associations of lifetime PTSD risk with single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs2074621 (NOTCH3) (p; uncorrected; = 0.04) in both cohorts, and with methylation of CpG site cg17519949 (NOTCH3) (p; uncorrected; = 0.05) in Rwandans. Yet, none of the (epi-)genetic associations survived multiple testing correction. Gene set enrichment analyses revealed enrichment for associations of two NOTCH pathways with lifetime PTSD risk in Ugandans: NOTCH binding (p; corrected; = 0.003) and NOTCH receptor processing (p; corrected; = 0.01). The environmental factor trauma load was significant in all analyses (all p < 0.001). Our integrated methodological approach suggests NOTCH as a possible mediator of PTSD risk after trauma. The results require replication, and the precise underlying pathophysiological mechanisms should be illuminated in future studies.
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