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BDNF rs6265 methylation and genotype interact on risk for schizophrenia

Authors :
Gianluca Ursini
Tommaso Cavalleri
Leonardo Fazio
Tiziana Angrisano
Luisa Iacovelli
Annamaria Porcelli
Giancarlo Maddalena
Giovanna Punzi
Marina Mancini
Barbara Gelao
Raffaella Romano
Rita Masellis
Francesca Calabrese
Antonio Rampino
Paolo Taurisano
Annabella Di Giorgio
Simona Keller
Letizia Tarantini
Lorenzo Sinibaldi
Tiziana Quarto
Teresa Popolizio
Grazia Caforio
Giuseppe Blasi
Marco A. Riva
Antonio De Blasi
Lorenzo Chiariotti
Valentina Bollati
Alessandro Bertolino
Gianluca Ursini
Tommaso Cavalleri
Leonardo Fazio
Tiziana Angrisano
Luisa Iacovelli
Annamaria Porcelli
Giancarlo Maddalena
Giovanna Punzi
Marina Mancini
Barbara Gelao
Raffaella Romano
Rita Masellis
Francesca Calabrese
Antonio Rampino
Paolo Taurisano
Annabella Di Giorgio
Simona Keller
Letizia Tarantini
Lorenzo Sinibaldi
Tiziana Quarto
Teresa Popolizio
Grazia Caforio
Giuseppe Blasi
Marco A. Riva
Antonio De Blasi
Lorenzo Chiariotti
Valentina Bollati
Alessandro Bertolino
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Epigenetic mechanisms can mediate gene-environment interactions relevant for complex disorders. The BDNF gene is crucial for development and brain plasticity, is sensitive to environmental stressors, such as hypoxia, and harbors the functional SNP rs6265 (Val66Met), which creates or abolishes a CpG dinucleotide for DNA methylation. We found that methylation at the BDNF rs6265 Val allele in peripheral blood of healthy subjects is associated with hypoxia-related early life events (hOCs) and intermediate phenotypes for schizophrenia in a distinctive manner, depending on rs6265 genotype: in ValVal individuals increased methylation is associated with exposure to hOCs and impaired working memory (WM) accuracy, while the opposite is true for ValMet subjects. Also, rs6265 methylation and hOCs interact in modulating WM-related prefrontal activity, another intermediate phenotype for schizophrenia, with an analogous opposite direction in the 2 genotypes. Consistently, rs6265 methylation has a different association with schizophrenia risk in ValVals and ValMets. The relationships of methylation with BDNF levels and of genotype with BHLHB2 binding likely contribute to these opposite effects of methylation. We conclude that BDNF rs6265 methylation interacts with genotype to bridge early environmental exposures to adult phenotypes, relevant for schizophrenia. The study of epigenetic changes in regions containing genetic variation relevant for human diseases may have beneficial implications for the understanding of how genes are actually translated into phenotypes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn947705928
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.6084.M9.FIGSHARE.C.2396491.V1