Further Evidence of Depdc7 Dna Hypomethylation in Depression: a Study in Adult Twins

2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 715-718 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Córdova-Palomera ◽  
M. Fatjó-Vilas ◽  
H. Palma-Gudiel ◽  
H. Blasco-Fontecilla ◽  
O. Kebir ◽  
...  

AbstractLate and early stressful factors have widely been recognized to play a role in the aetiology of depression. Recent research indicates that such adverse environmental stimuli may alter gene expression in humans via epigenetic modifications. While epigenetic changes such as DNA methylation are likely involved in these processes, it is still unknown what specific genomic loci may be hyper- or hypo-methylated in depression. The association between depressive symptoms during the last 30 days (Brief Symptom Inventory [BSI]) and peripheral-blood DNA methylation levels at genomic loci previously reported as epigenetically altered in saliva and brain of depressive patients was evaluated in a community sample of 34 adult Caucasian MZ twins (17 pairs). Intrapair DNA methylation differences in an intron of DEPDC7 (chr11:33040743) were associated with intrapair differences in current depressive symptoms. Accordingly, a site-specific 10% DNA hypomethylation in a co-twin would correlate with a current depressive symptom score around 3.1 BSI points above the score of his/her less-depressed co-twin. These findings indicate that DEPDC7 hypomethylation in peripheral blood DNA may be associated with recent depressive symptomatology, in line with previous results.

Nutrients ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 1972
Author(s):  
Ezgi Dogan-Sander ◽  
Roland Mergl ◽  
Anja Willenberg ◽  
Ronny Baber ◽  
Kerstin Wirkner ◽  
...  

Depression and vitamin D deficiency are major public health problems. The existing literature indicates the complex relationship between depression and vitamin D. The purpose of this study was to examine whether this relationship is moderated or mediated by inflammation. A community sample (n = 7162) from the LIFE-Adult-Study was investigated, for whom depressive symptoms were assessed via the German version of CES-D scale and serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels and inflammatory markers (IL-6 and CRP levels, WBC count) were quantified. Mediation analyses were performed using Hayes’ PROCESS macro and regression analyses were conducted to test moderation effects. There was a significant negative correlation between CES-D and 25(OH)D, and positive associations between inflammatory markers and CES-D scores. Only WBC partially mediated the association between 25(OH)D levels and depressive symptoms both in a simple mediation model (ab: −0.0042) and a model including covariates (ab: −0.0011). None of the inflammatory markers showed a moderation effect on the association between 25(OH)D levels and depressive symptoms. This present work highlighted the complex relationship between vitamin D, depressive symptoms and inflammation. Future studies are needed to examine the effect of vitamin D supplementation on inflammation and depressive symptomatology for causality assessment.


Author(s):  
Francesca Lionetti ◽  
Daniel N. Klein ◽  
Massimiliano Pastore ◽  
Elaine N. Aron ◽  
Arthur Aron ◽  
...  

AbstractSome children are more affected than others by their upbringing due to their increased sensitivity to the environment. More sensitive children are at heightened risk for the development of internalizing problems, particularly when experiencing unsupportive parenting. However, little is known about how the interplay between children’s sensitivity and parenting leads to higher levels of depressive symptoms. In the current study, we investigated the interaction between early parenting and children’s sensitivity on levels of depressive symptomatology in middle childhood, exploring the role of rumination as a possible mediator in a community sample. Participants included 196 USA resident families, from a middle class and mostly European–American background, and their healthy children, followed up from age 3 until 9 and 12 years. Environmental sensitivity was assessed observationally when children were 3 years old. Parenting style was based on parent-report at the age of 3 years. When children were nine, they completed questionnaires on rumination and depressive symptoms (repeated at 12 years). Analyses were run applying a Bayesian approach. Children’s sensitivity interacted with permissive parenting in predicting rumination at age 9. Rumination, in turn, was associated with depressive symptoms at age 9 and, to a lesser extent, at age 12. No relevant interactions emerged for authoritative and authoritarian parenting. Sensitive children may be at heightened risk for internalizing problems when exposed to a permissive parenting style. Permissive parenting was associated with increased ruminative coping strategies in sensitive children which, in turn, predicted higher levels of depression. Hence, rumination emerged as an important cognitive risk factor for the development of depressive symptoms in sensitive children.


2017 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Meiser ◽  
Günter Esser

To provide further insight into stress generation patterns in boys and girls around puberty, this study investigated longitudinal reciprocal relations between depressive symptoms, dysfunctional attitudes, and stress generation, the process by which individuals contribute to the occurrence of stress in interpersonal contexts (e.g., problematic social interactions) or in noninterpersonal contexts (e.g., achievement problems). A community sample of N = 924 German children and early adolescents (51.8% male) completed depressive symptoms and dysfunctional attitudes measures at T1 and again 20 months later (T2). Stressful life events were reported at T2. Dysfunctional attitudes were unrelated to stress generation. Interpersonal, but not noninterpersonal, dependent stress partially mediated the relationship between initial and later depressive symptoms, with girls being more likely to generate interpersonal stress in response to depressive symptoms. Findings underscore the role of interpersonal stress generation in the early development of depressive symptomatology, and in the gender difference in depression prevalence emerging around puberty.


2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucy Riglin ◽  
Stephan Collishaw ◽  
Katherine H. Shelton ◽  
I. C. McManus ◽  
Terry Ng-Knight ◽  
...  

AbstractStress has been shown to have a causal effect on risk for depression. We investigated the role of cognitive ability as a moderator of the effect of stressful life events on depressive symptoms and whether this varied by gender. Data were analyzed in two adolescent data sets: one representative community sample aged 11–12 years (n = 460) and one at increased familial risk of depression aged 9–17 years (n = 335). In both data sets, a three-way interaction was found whereby for girls, but not boys, higher cognitive ability buffered the association between stress and greater depressive symptoms. The interaction was replicated when the outcome was a diagnosis of major depressive disorder. This buffering effect in girls was not attributable to coping efficacy. However, a small proportion of the variance was accounted for by sensitivity to environmental stressors. Results suggest that this moderating effect of cognitive ability in girls is largely attributable to greater available resources for cognitive operations that offer protection against stress-induced reductions in cognitive processing and cognitive control which in turn reduces the likelihood of depressive symptomatology.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 870-870
Author(s):  
Nadja Blagitko-Dorfs ◽  
Pascal Schlosser ◽  
Rainer Claus ◽  
Tobias Ma ◽  
Katharina Götze ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in elderly patients remains challenging. Low-dose DNA hypomethylating agents are a therapeutic option in myelodysplastic syndromes and AML. However, the mechanism of action of hypomethylating agents and the role of induction of DNA hypomethylation in the clinical response is still unclear. To unravel the in vivoeffects of sequential cycles of decitabine, we set out to characterize methylomes of leukemic blasts, T cells (presumably not part of the malignant clone) and granulocytes before and during treatment of AML patients enrolled in the randomized phase II DECIDER clinical trial (NCT00867672). We developed a statistical model for longitudinal data analysis to identify the strongest hypomethylation response. Methods: Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from AML patients were collected before and during therapy (i.v. 20 mg/m2 decitabine for 5 days, with or without subsequent oral drug add-on). Leukemic blasts and T-cells were isolated using automatic magnetic sorting of cells (autoMACS) labelled with anti-human CD34, CD117 and CD3 MACS microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec), respectively. Granulocytes were isolated using dextran sedimentation. Cell type specific genome-wide DNA methylation profiles were obtained using Infinium Human Methylation 450 BeadChip arrays. Data were analyzed using R packages RnBeads applying beta mixture quantile dilation for normalization (Teschendorff et al. Bioinformatics, 29:189–196, 2013) and a modified version of NHMMfdr for multiple testing. Results: Peripheral blood blasts (median purity: 92%) were isolated from 20 patients, and T cells (median purity: 94%) from 26 patients before treatment and on days 4 and/or 8 and 15 of treatment cycle 1. From 10 patients, blasts and T cells were also collected during and/or after cycle 2. In total, until now 127 methylomes (46 blasts, 47 T cells, 34 granulocytes) were generated and used for mathematical modelling. Since the trial is still recruiting, genome-wide methylation was interpreted blinded to all clinical data including drug add-on (ATRA, valproic acid). First, the methylation dynamics of each individual CpG site described by a specified summary statistics were identified. Then, inter-probe distance and CpG annotation were incorporated to explain the dependence structure between CpG sites. In order to control the false discovery rate (FDR), we adapted a method proposed for differential DNA methylation (Kuan & Chiang, Biometrics 68: 774–783, 2012). The summary statistics for each CpG site were modelled to follow a non–homogeneous hidden Markov model. Statistical testing was validated by simulations revealing a very high discriminative power for affected CpGs even with very low methylation dynamics. Applying the model to blasts and T cells, extensive differences in the in vivomethylation changes became apparent. In blasts, 13% of CpG (59,920 CpGs of total 460,343 CpGs) showed significant DNA hypomethylation (Δβ>0.1, FDR<0.05) shared between patients by day 8, 75.8% of which (45,428 CpGs) were at least partially remethylated by day 15. Out of the 59,920 CpGs hypomethylated by day 8, 21.2% were located in promoters, 50.1% in gene bodies and 28.7% in intergenic regions. In contrast, in T cells only 2 CpGs out of 460,343 CpGs were significantly hypomethylated. This low number is partially due to the higher inter-individual variance as compared to leukemic blasts. Increases in DNA methylation across all patients were very rare, with only 38 CpGs consistently and significantly hypermethylated in blasts and none in T cells. Methylome analysis in granulocytes is currently ongoing. Conclusions: Our mathematical model revealed significant DNA hypomethylation by day 8, with striking remethylation by day 15 from start of decitabine treatment in AML blasts in vivo. Most of the hypomethylated CpGs resided in non-promoter regions. In contrast, T-cells were much less affected, which might be due to the low cell division rate and the fact that they are non-malignant cells. This model will hopefully allow determination whether the effects of decitabine are targeted or random, by including sequential samples from later treatment cycles. Unblinding of the patients' clinical data will reveal potential biomarkers of response to epigenetic therapy. Disclosures Lübbert: Ratiopharm: received study drug valproic acid, received study drug valproic acid Other; Johnson&Johnson: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, received study drug decitabine Other.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nayra Villar Scattone ◽  
Tatiane Moreno Ferrarias Epiphanio ◽  
Karine Germano Caddrobi ◽  
Juliana Shimara Pires Ferrão ◽  
Francisco Javier Hernandez-Blazquez ◽  
...  

Oral mucosal melanomas (OMMs) are aggressive and resistant cancers of high importance in veterinary oncology. Amelanotic OMM produces comparatively less melanin and is considered to be more aggressive than melanotic OMM. Global DNA methylation profiles with hypomethylated or hypermethylated patterns have both been associated with aggressive neoplasms; however, global DNA hypomethylation seems to correlate to higher aggressiveness. Accordingly, global DNA methylation in peripheral blood leukocytes has been investigated to understand the role of systemic or environmental factors in cancer development. This study aimed to quantify global DNA methylation in canine melanotic and amelanotic OMM samples and in the peripheral blood leukocytes of the same dogs. Tumor tissue samples were collected from 38 dogs, of which 19 were melanotic and 19 were amelanotic OMM. These were submitted to immunohistochemistry (IHC) with anti-5-methylcytosine (5mC) and anti-Ki67 primary antibodies. Ki67- and 5mC-positive nuclei were manually scored with the help of an image analysis system. Peripheral blood samples were collected from 18 among the 38 OMM-bearing dogs and from 7 additional healthy control dogs. Peripheral blood leukocytes were isolated from the 25 dogs, and DNA was extracted and analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) for global DNA methylation. The pattern of global DNA methylation in both canine melanotic and amelanotic OMM indicated higher percentages of weakly or negatively stained nuclei in most of the OMM cells, presuming predominant global DNA hypomethylation. In addition, Ki67 counts in amelanotic OMM were significantly higher than those in melanotic OMM (p &lt; 0.001). Global DNA methylation different immunostaining patterns (strong, weak or negative) correlated with Ki67 scores. Global DNA methylation in circulating leukocytes did not differ between the 9 melanotic and 9 amelanotic OMM or between the 18 OMM-bearing dogs and the 7 healthy dogs. This study provides new information on canine melanotic and amelanotic OMM based on global DNA methylation and cell proliferation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 1360.2-1360
Author(s):  
E. Toussirot ◽  
S. Pasquereau ◽  
C. Vauchy ◽  
Z. Nehme ◽  
D. Wendling ◽  
...  

Background:Axial spondyloarthritis (ax-SpA) corresponds to a group of chronic inflammatory disease mainly affecting the axial skeleton. TNFα and IL-17A have been identified as key inflammatory mediators driving the inflammatory process of ax-SpA. Epigenetics refers to different mechanisms that alter gene expression without involving changes in DNA sequence. The mechanisms of epigenetics include microRNA, histone modifications or DNA methylation. DNA methylation is associated with a repressed chromatin state and inhibition of gene expression. It is recognized that aberrant DNA methylation can result in immune cell autoreactivity.Objectives:Epigenetics have been rarely evaluated in ax-SpA. We previoulsy reported that patients with ankysloing spondylitis (AS) had an imbalance between HAT and HDAC activities. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the global DNA methylation of patients with ax-SpA.Methods:Case-control study (NCT03092583). Patients with radiographic (AS) or non radiographic (nr) ax-SpA (ASAS criteria) and healthy controls (HC) were evaluated. All the patients were biologic naïve and under NSAIDs. Disease activity was evaluated by BASDAI and ASDAS. CD4+T cells and CD14+ monocytes were isolated form peripheral blood and then DNA was extracted (E.Z.N.A. Blood DNA kit, Omega Bio-Tek). Global DNA methylation (5-mC) was determined using MethylAmp global DNA methylation quantification kit (Epigentek) using 150ng of total DNA.Results:25 patients with AS (18 M; mean age ± SEM: 48.9 ± 3.5 y; mean disease duration: 14.9 ± 2.2 y; B27+: 84%), 21 with nr-axSpA (11 M; age: 42 ± 3.3 y; disease duration: 7.9 ± 2.3 y; B27+: 68%) and 11 HC (7 M; age: 48.4 ± 3.9 y) were evaluated. Patients had active disease (BASDAI and ASDAS in AS and nr-axSpA: 5.1 ± 0.4 and 5.4 ± 0.5; 4.7 ± 0.4 and 5 ± 0.4, respectively). In CD4+ T lymphocytes, global DNA methylation was lower in the whole group of patients (AS and nr-ax-SpA) compared to HC (0.91 ± 0.26vs1.08 ± 0.19 % of 5-mC) (NS). Conversely, DNA methylation was higher in monocytes from patients compared to HC (1.43 ± 0.16vs1.15 ± 0.5 % of 5-mC) (NS). When analysing the results between ax-SpA subgroups, an hypomethylation was more evident in the CD4+T lymphocytes from patients with nr-axSpA compared to AS and HC, a result that was not observed in the monocyte subpopulation (Figures).Conclusion:A global DNA hypomethylation is observed in patients with ax-SpA, especially in the nr-axSpA subgroup. These results are more evident in T CD4+ lymphocytes. Additional analysis on a larger series of patients is required to confirm these preliminary results. In addition, we aim to examine the specific DNA methylation status of the TNF promoter gene.References:[1]Toussirot Eet al, PlosOne 2013Figure.global DNA methylation of CD4+ T lymphocytes and monocyctes from patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), non radiographic axial spondyloarthritis (nr-ax-SpA) and healthy controls (HC)Disclosure of Interests:None declared


1992 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Fuhrer ◽  
T. C. Antonucci ◽  
M. Gagnon ◽  
J.-F. Dartigues ◽  
P. Barberger-Gateau ◽  
...  

SYNOPSISAs part of a 5-year, prospective, epidemiological survey of normal and pathological ageing, this cross-sectional analysis examines the relationship between depressive symptomatology (CES-D) and cognitive functioning (MMS) in a community sample of 2792 non-institutionalized persons (age ≥ 65) living in Southwest France. Of the sample, 13·4%, report depressive symptoms above the cut-off. A significant association was found between CES-D and MMS scores, but after adjusting for age, living arrangements, and especially functional limitations, the relationship remained strong only for women.


2021 ◽  
Vol 80 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 410.3-411
Author(s):  
M. Vecellio ◽  
A. Ceribelli ◽  
E. Paraboschi ◽  
N. Isailovic ◽  
F. Motta ◽  
...  

Background:Psoriatic disease is a chronic inflammatory disorder spanning from skin disease (psoriasis) to psoriatic arthritis (PsA). The genetic background is insufficient to explain disease onset as illustrated by not very informative Genome Wide Association Studies and monozygotic (MZ) twin studies recently performed. It is strongly assumed that epigenetics may contribute to disease susceptibility modulating gene expression. DNA methylation has been found involved in several autoimmune inflammatory rheumatic diseases. Here we have analysed the DNA methylation profile of a selected cohort of MZ twins discordant for psoriasis/PsA.Objectives:To identify the methylome associated with psoriasis and PsA in the peripheral blood of MZ twins discordant for these conditions.Methods:Peripheral blood from 7 couples of MZ twins discordant for psoriatic disease was collected and DNA extracted for a genome-wide evaluation of the DNA methylation profile, with the Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip. Minfi and the packages of the Bioconductor were used to analyse the data obtained. Quality control and exclusion criteria were applied to the raw data having a final number of 762.451 probes, which accounts for 88% of the total.Results:The approach first identified 2564 differentially methylated positions (DMPs; *p<0.005) with 19 genes potentially affected (with at least two DMPs within 1 kb of distance), including SMAD3 and SMARCA4/BRG1 involved in the Interferon and TGFβ pathways. Gene Ontology (GO) analysis of DMP-associated genes showed a significative enrichment (*p<0.005) in transcription factor binding, transcription corepressor and transcription coactivator activity, SMAD binding and histone -lysine-N-methyltransferase activity. To further validate the results, 5’-methylcytosine immunoprecipitation (MedIP) followed by Real Time PCR was performed to assess the methylation level of SMAD3 and SMARCA4/BRG1 promoters in the same cohort of MZ twins. We found significantly DNA methylation enrichment in SMARCA4/BRG1 promoter in psoriatic disease twins (p<0.05). SMAD3 and SMARCA4/BRG1 mRNA expression was also assessed to evaluate any inverse correlation with promoter methylation level, on the MZ cohort used for the EPIC array (n=4) and on a cohort of PsA/Ps patients (n=8) and appropriate healthy controls (n=3). Reduced mRNA expression (p<0.05) was demonstrated for SMARCA4/BRG1 (n=4). Conversely, no changes were found for SMAD3.Conclusion:We report the first DNA methylation approach in MZ twins discordant for psoriatic disease. We believe that the observed changes in SMAD3 and SMARCA/BRG1 genes may suggest an epigenetic imbalance of chromatin remodelling factors involved in inflammation pathways with a potential role in PsA/psoriasis immunopathogenesis.Disclosure of Interests:None declared


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Adele H. Wang ◽  
CMA Haworth ◽  
Qiang Ren

BackgroundIn recent decades, China has experienced dramatic changes to its social and economic environment, which has affected the distribution of wellbeing across its citizens. While several studies have investigated individual level predictors of wellbeing in the Chinese population, less research has been done looking at contextual effects. This cross-sectional study looks at the individual and contextual effects of (regional) education, unemployment and marriage (rate) on individual happiness, life satisfaction and depressive symptomatology. MethodsData were collected from over 29,000 individuals (aged 18 to 110, 51.91% female) in the China Family Panel Studies, and merged with county level census data obtained from the 2010 China Population Census and Statistical Yearbook. To explore contextual effects, we used multilevel models accounting for the hierarchical structure of the data. ResultsWe found that a one-year increase in education was associated with a 0.17% increase in happiness and a 0.16% decrease in depressive symptoms. Unemployed men were 1% less happy, 1% less satisfied with life and reported 0.84% more depressive symptoms than employed men while minimal effects were seen for women. Single, divorced and widowed individuals had worse outcomes than married individuals (ranging from 2.96% to 21% differences). We found interaction effects for education and employment. Less educated individuals had greater happiness and less depressive symptoms in counties with higher average education compared to counterparts in less educated counties. In contrast, more educated individuals were less satisfied with life in more educated counties, an effect that is possibly due to social comparison. Employed individuals had lower life satisfaction in areas of high unemployment, while levels were constant for the unemployed. A 1% increase in county marriage rate was associated with 0.33% and 0.24% increases in happiness and life satisfaction respectively, with no interactions. We speculate that this effect could be due to greater social cohesion in the neighbourhood.ConclusionsOur results show that policies designed to improve employment and marriage rates will be beneficial for all, while interventions to encourage positive social comparison strategies may help to offset the negative effects of increasing neighbourhood average education on the highly educated.


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