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Rare copy number variation in posttraumatic stress disorder

Authors :
Maihofer, Adam X
Engchuan, Worrawat
Huguet, Guillaume
Klein, Marieke
MacDonald, Jeffrey R
Shanta, Omar
Thiruvahindrapuram, Bhooma
Jean-Louis, Martineau
Saci, Zohra
Jacquemont, Sebastien
Scherer, Stephen W
Ketema, Elizabeth
Aiello, Allison E
Amstadter, Ananda B
Avdibegović, Esmina
Babic, Dragan
Baker, Dewleen G
Bisson, Jonathan I
Boks, Marco P
Bolger, Elizabeth A
Bryant, Richard A
Bustamante, Angela C
Caldas-de-Almeida, Jose Miguel
Cardoso, Graça
Deckert, Jurgen
Delahanty, Douglas L
Domschke, Katharina
Dunlop, Boadie W
Dzubur-Kulenovic, Alma
Evans, Alexandra
Feeny, Norah C
Franz, Carol E
Gautam, Aarti
Geuze, Elbert
Goci, Aferdita
Hammamieh, Rasha
Jakovljevic, Miro
Jett, Marti
Jones, Ian
Kaufman, Milissa L
Kessler, Ronald C
King, Anthony P
Kremen, William S
Lawford, Bruce R
Lebois, Lauren AM
Lewis, Catrin
Liberzon, Israel
Linnstaedt, Sarah D
Lugonja, Bozo
Luykx, Jurjen J
Lyons, Michael J
Mavissakalian, Matig R
McLaughlin, Katie A
McLean, Samuel A
Mehta, Divya
Mellor, Rebecca
Morris, Charles Phillip
Muhie, Seid
Orcutt, Holly K
Peverill, Matthew
Ratanatharathorn, Andrew
Risbrough, Victoria B
Rizzo, Albert
Roberts, Andrea L
Rothbaum, Alex O
Rothbaum, Barbara O
Roy-Byrne, Peter
Ruggiero, Kenneth J
Rutten, Bart PF
Schijven, Dick
Seng, Julia S
Sheerin, Christina M
Sorenson, Michael A
Teicher, Martin H
Uddin, Monica
Ursano, Robert J
Vinkers, Christiaan H
Voisey, Joanne
Weber, Heike
Winternitz, Sherry
Xavier, Miguel
Yang, Ruoting
McD Young, Ross
Zoellner, Lori A
Psychiatric Genomics Consortium PTSD Working Group
Psychiatric Genomics Consortium CNV Working Group
Salem, Rany M
Shaffer, Richard A
Wu, Tianying
Ressler, Kerry J
Stein, Murray B
Koenen, Karestan C
Sebat, Jonathan
Nievergelt, Caroline M
Source :
Molecular psychiatry, vol 27, iss 12
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2022.

Abstract

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a heritable (h2 = 24-71%) psychiatric illness. Copy number variation (CNV) is a form of rare genetic variation that has been implicated in the etiology of psychiatric disorders, but no large-scale investigation of CNV in PTSD has been performed. We present an association study of CNV burden and PTSD symptoms in a sample of 114,383 participants (13,036 cases and 101,347 controls) of European ancestry. CNVs were called using two calling algorithms and intersected to a consensus set. Quality control was performed to remove strong outlier samples. CNVs were examined for association with PTSD within each cohort using linear or logistic regression analysis adjusted for population structure and CNV quality metrics, then inverse variance weighted meta-analyzed across cohorts. We examined the genome-wide total span of CNVs, enrichment of CNVs within specified gene-sets, and CNVs overlapping individual genes and implicated neurodevelopmental regions. The total distance covered by deletions crossing over known neurodevelopmental CNV regions was significant (beta = 0.029, SE = 0.005, P = 6.3 × 10-8). The genome-wide neurodevelopmental CNV burden identified explains 0.034% of the variation in PTSD symptoms. The 15q11.2 BP1-BP2 microdeletion region was significantly associated with PTSD (beta = 0.0206, SE = 0.0056, P = 0.0002). No individual significant genes interrupted by CNV were identified. 22 gene pathways related to the function of the nervous system and brain were significant in pathway analysis (FDR q

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular psychiatry, vol 27, iss 12
Accession number :
edsair.od.......325..cdc9b8f2b48cd975e00e52c275112f94