Genome-wide DNA methylation meta-analysis in the brains of suicide completers
Policicchio, S; Washer, S; Viana, J; et al.Iatrou, A; Burrage, J; Hannon, E; Turecki, G; Kaminsky, Z; Mill, J; Dempster, EL; Murphy, TM
Date: 19 February 2020
Journal
Translational Psychiatry
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Suicide is the second leading cause of death globally among young people representing a significant global health
burden. Although the molecular correlates of suicide remains poorly understood, it has been hypothesised that
epigenomic processes may play a role. The objective of this study was to identify suicide-associated DNA ...
Suicide is the second leading cause of death globally among young people representing a significant global health
burden. Although the molecular correlates of suicide remains poorly understood, it has been hypothesised that
epigenomic processes may play a role. The objective of this study was to identify suicide-associated DNA methylation
changes in the human brain by utilising previously published and unpublished methylomic datasets. We analysed
prefrontal cortex (PFC, n = 211) and cerebellum (CER, n = 114) DNA methylation profiles from suicide completers and
non-psychiatric, sudden-death controls, meta-analysing data from independent cohorts for each brain region
separately. We report evidence for altered DNA methylation at several genetic loci in suicide cases compared to
controls in both brain regions with suicide-associated differentially methylated positions enriched among functional
pathways relevant to psychiatric phenotypes and suicidality, including nervous system development (PFC) and
regulation of long-term synaptic depression (CER). In addition, we examined the functional consequences of variable
DNA methylation within a PFC suicide-associated differentially methylated region (PSORS1C3 DMR) using a dual
luciferase assay and examined expression of nearby genes. DNA methylation within this region was associated with
decreased expression of firefly luciferase but was not associated with expression of nearby genes, PSORS1C3 and
POU5F1. Our data suggest that suicide is associated with DNA methylation, offering novel insights into the molecular
pathology associated with suicidality.
Institute of Biomedical & Clinical Science
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