Epigenome-wide DNA methylation in obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Schiele. Miriam A MA; Lipovsek. Jan J; Schlosser. Pascal P; Soutschek. Michael M; Schratt. Gerhard G; Zaudig. Michael M; Berberich. Götz G; Köttgen. Anna A; Domschke. Katharina K
Key Findings
- Methylation differences were identified at several sites in OCD patients versus controls
- Top hits map to a microRNA gene and to regions near humanin‑like genes (MT‑RNRL8, MT‑RNRL3, MT‑RNRL2)
- The findings are preliminary and need replication in larger groups
Practical Outcomes
- At this stage there’s no direct action for biohackers; the study is an early clue about OCD biology, not a protocol or dosage recommendation for humanin.
Summary
Researchers found DNA methylation changes near human‑like genes (including humanin‑related genes) in people with OCD, but this doesn’t tell us how to use humanin for health.
Abstract
In adult patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), altered DNA methylation has been discerned in several candidate genes, while DNA methylation on an epigenome-wide level has been investigated in only one Chinese study so far. Here, an epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) was performed in a sample of 76 OCD patients of European ancestry (37 women, age ± SD: 33.51 ± 10.92 years) and 76 sex- and age-matched healthy controls for the first time using the Illumina MethylationEPIC BeadChip. After quality control, nine epigenome-wide significant quantitative trait methylation sites (QTMs) and 21 suggestive hits were discerned in the final sample of 68 patients and 68 controls. The top hit (cg24159721) and four other significant QTMs (cg11894324, cg01070250, cg11330075, cg15174812) map to the region of the microRNA 12136 gene (MIR12136). Two additional significant CpG sites (cg05740793, cg20450977) are located in the flanking region of the MT-RNR2 (humanin) like 8 gene (MT-RNRL8), while two further QTMs (cg16267121, cg15890734) map to the regions of the MT-RNR2 (humanin) like 3 (MT-RNRL3) and MT-RNR2 (humanin) like 2 (MT-RNRL2) genes. Provided replication of the present findings in larger samples, the identified QTMs might provide more biological insight into the pathogenesis of OCD and thereby could in the future serve as peripheral epigenetic markers of OCD risk with the potential to inform targeted preventive and therapeutic efforts.
Study Information
pubmed
2022
2022-06-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/s41398-022-01996-w
17
54