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39.1 DNA METHYLATION OF IMMUNE CELLS IN PERSONS AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS

BACKGROUND: A dysregulated immune system is implicated in the development of psychotic disorders. Persons with schizophrenia have altered levels of circulating immune cell signaling molecules (cytokines), and elevation of specific cytokines predict conversion to psychosis in persons at clinical high...

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Autores principales: Perkins, Diana, Clark, Jeffries, Addington, Jean, Beardon, Carrie, Cadenhead, Kristin, Cannon, Tyrone, Cornblatt, Barbara, Mathalon, Daniel, McGlashan, Thomas, Seidman, Larry, Tsuang, Ming, Walker, Elaine, Woods, Scott
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5887597/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby014.159
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author Perkins, Diana
Clark, Jeffries
Addington, Jean
Beardon, Carrie
Cadenhead, Kristin
Cannon, Tyrone
Cornblatt, Barbara
Mathalon, Daniel
McGlashan, Thomas
Seidman, Larry
Tsuang, Ming
Walker, Elaine
Woods, Scott
author_facet Perkins, Diana
Clark, Jeffries
Addington, Jean
Beardon, Carrie
Cadenhead, Kristin
Cannon, Tyrone
Cornblatt, Barbara
Mathalon, Daniel
McGlashan, Thomas
Seidman, Larry
Tsuang, Ming
Walker, Elaine
Woods, Scott
author_sort Perkins, Diana
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A dysregulated immune system is implicated in the development of psychotic disorders. Persons with schizophrenia have altered levels of circulating immune cell signaling molecules (cytokines), and elevation of specific cytokines predict conversion to psychosis in persons at clinical high risk. Whether these peripheral signals are a causal or a secondary phenomenon is unclear. But, subpopulations of circulating immune cells do regulate the brain from meningeal and perivascular locations influencing cognition, mood, and behavior, and thus may be relevant to schizophrenia vulnerability. Hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow differentiate into cascading subtypes depending on signals from other organs, especially the brain. For example, a monocyte subpopulation emerges with repeated social defeat that establish the persistence of anxiety-like behaviors; blocking their release or inhibiting their attachment to brain vascular endothelium prevents the emergence of anxiety-like behaviors. In humans, a similar monocyte subpopulation is associated with social isolation and other adversities including low SES, chronic stress, and bereavement. METHODS: The North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study (NAPLS2) is an eight-site observational study of predictors and mechanisms of conversion to psychosis The full cohort includes 763 at clinical high risk (CHR) based on the Criteria of Prodromal State (COPS) and 279 demographically similar unaffected comparison (UC) subjects. Methylation of whole blood DNA collected in PAXgene tubes at baseline was analyzed with the Illumina 450k array in a subgroup of 59 subjects who converted to psychosis (CHR-C), 84 CHR subjects followed for 2 years who did not develop psychosis (CHR-NC) and 67 unaffected subjects (UC). Our analyses focused on methylation of promoter regions of genes, associated with gene expression. Classifier construction used Coarse Approximation Linear Function (CALF) with bootstrapping of 1000 random 80% subsets with replacement to determine statistical likelihood. RESULTS: We found highly overlapping sets of differentially methylated promoter regions in CHR-C subjects compared to CHR-NC and to UC subjects. A set of 10 markers correctly classified CHR-C and CHR-NC subjects with high accuracy (AUC=0.94, 95% CI 0.89–0.98). Included was SIRT1, a gene that is upregulated with HSV reactivation. DISCUSSION: Circulating immune cells excerpt powerful influences on mood, cognition and behavior. An obvious example is the experience of most human with “sickness syndrome”, characterized by apathy, avolition, and withdrawal, and triggered by immune-cell-released cytokines producing an adaptive, resource conserving, behavioral response. While at an early stage, our findings further implicate immune system dysregulation as a mechanism in the development of psychosis.
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spelling pubmed-58875972018-04-11 39.1 DNA METHYLATION OF IMMUNE CELLS IN PERSONS AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS Perkins, Diana Clark, Jeffries Addington, Jean Beardon, Carrie Cadenhead, Kristin Cannon, Tyrone Cornblatt, Barbara Mathalon, Daniel McGlashan, Thomas Seidman, Larry Tsuang, Ming Walker, Elaine Woods, Scott Schizophr Bull Abstracts BACKGROUND: A dysregulated immune system is implicated in the development of psychotic disorders. Persons with schizophrenia have altered levels of circulating immune cell signaling molecules (cytokines), and elevation of specific cytokines predict conversion to psychosis in persons at clinical high risk. Whether these peripheral signals are a causal or a secondary phenomenon is unclear. But, subpopulations of circulating immune cells do regulate the brain from meningeal and perivascular locations influencing cognition, mood, and behavior, and thus may be relevant to schizophrenia vulnerability. Hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow differentiate into cascading subtypes depending on signals from other organs, especially the brain. For example, a monocyte subpopulation emerges with repeated social defeat that establish the persistence of anxiety-like behaviors; blocking their release or inhibiting their attachment to brain vascular endothelium prevents the emergence of anxiety-like behaviors. In humans, a similar monocyte subpopulation is associated with social isolation and other adversities including low SES, chronic stress, and bereavement. METHODS: The North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study (NAPLS2) is an eight-site observational study of predictors and mechanisms of conversion to psychosis The full cohort includes 763 at clinical high risk (CHR) based on the Criteria of Prodromal State (COPS) and 279 demographically similar unaffected comparison (UC) subjects. Methylation of whole blood DNA collected in PAXgene tubes at baseline was analyzed with the Illumina 450k array in a subgroup of 59 subjects who converted to psychosis (CHR-C), 84 CHR subjects followed for 2 years who did not develop psychosis (CHR-NC) and 67 unaffected subjects (UC). Our analyses focused on methylation of promoter regions of genes, associated with gene expression. Classifier construction used Coarse Approximation Linear Function (CALF) with bootstrapping of 1000 random 80% subsets with replacement to determine statistical likelihood. RESULTS: We found highly overlapping sets of differentially methylated promoter regions in CHR-C subjects compared to CHR-NC and to UC subjects. A set of 10 markers correctly classified CHR-C and CHR-NC subjects with high accuracy (AUC=0.94, 95% CI 0.89–0.98). Included was SIRT1, a gene that is upregulated with HSV reactivation. DISCUSSION: Circulating immune cells excerpt powerful influences on mood, cognition and behavior. An obvious example is the experience of most human with “sickness syndrome”, characterized by apathy, avolition, and withdrawal, and triggered by immune-cell-released cytokines producing an adaptive, resource conserving, behavioral response. While at an early stage, our findings further implicate immune system dysregulation as a mechanism in the development of psychosis. Oxford University Press 2018-04 2018-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5887597/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby014.159 Text en © Maryland Psychiatric Research Center 2018. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Perkins, Diana
Clark, Jeffries
Addington, Jean
Beardon, Carrie
Cadenhead, Kristin
Cannon, Tyrone
Cornblatt, Barbara
Mathalon, Daniel
McGlashan, Thomas
Seidman, Larry
Tsuang, Ming
Walker, Elaine
Woods, Scott
39.1 DNA METHYLATION OF IMMUNE CELLS IN PERSONS AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS
title 39.1 DNA METHYLATION OF IMMUNE CELLS IN PERSONS AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS
title_full 39.1 DNA METHYLATION OF IMMUNE CELLS IN PERSONS AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS
title_fullStr 39.1 DNA METHYLATION OF IMMUNE CELLS IN PERSONS AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS
title_full_unstemmed 39.1 DNA METHYLATION OF IMMUNE CELLS IN PERSONS AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS
title_short 39.1 DNA METHYLATION OF IMMUNE CELLS IN PERSONS AT CLINICAL HIGH RISK FOR PSYCHOSIS
title_sort 39.1 dna methylation of immune cells in persons at clinical high risk for psychosis
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5887597/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby014.159
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