Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) occurs only in vulnerable individuals after exposure to severe traumatic events. This risk is due, in part, to 40-70% heritability of differential vulnerability or resilience. In fact, recent studies have suggeste that the heritability for PTSD may be twice that of Major Depressive Disorder. Due to increasing collaborations across the field of PTSD genomics, it is a very exciting time for discovering the underlying genetic risk factors contributing to PTSD. The purpose of this application is to facilitate meta- analyses of genome-wide association study (GWAS) data for symptoms and diagnosis of PTSD. We propose to conduct this first large-scale meta-analysis through the PTSD group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC). The PGC was created in 2007 to conduct field-wide mega-analyses of individual data for five major psychiatric disorders. It united the field for the first time, and it is the largest consortium (>500 scientists from >80 institutios in 25 countries) in the history of psychiatry. The PGC has already produced three major findings with regard to the genetic architecture of psychiatric disorders. First, reliable associations can be identified with extremely large sample sizes. A meta-analysis of GWAS in SCZ has produced over 100 loci at the genome-wide significance threshold in a sample of 36,000 cases and 43,000 controls. Second, the polygenic architecture inferred from family studies was confirmed with molecular evidence, and refined via demonstration of substantial effects of both common and rare variants. Third, confirming findings from twin studies, there are shared genetic contributions among psychiatric disorders. The PGC-PTSD group was launched in May 2013 and since then has been enormously successful, with over 25 investigators contributing genotype data from over 20 studies with a total N of over 76,000 combined cases and trauma-exposed controls. We also have commitments of collaborations using ~ 77,000 additional cases and controls from banked samples from over 20 studies, and our progress thus far demonstrates feasibility of the proposed work. We hypothesize that with well-powered, large sample-size studies, along with a deeply phenotyped set of cohorts, the PGC-PTSD group can identify the genetic architecture of PTSD. We will test this hypothesis through our Primary Aim focusing on detecting novel genetic variation associated with risk for PTSD. The primary aim of this study is to detect novel genetic variants (SNPs and CNVs) that predict the development of PTSD following trauma. We will conduct the study in three stages - discovery, biological annotation, and replication.
This aim will be supplemented by Exploratory Aims which will expand the genomic approaches to include GxE analyses, meta-analyses of intermediate phenotypes, and cross disorder polygenic risk score analyses. Identifying the genetic pathways underlying PTSD will lead to an improved neurobiological understanding, enhanced prevention, and improved treatment of this debilitating and prevalent syndrome.

Public Health Relevance

Up to 70% of the variance determining who develops Posttraumatic Stress Disorder following a severe trauma may be genetic; however, most successful analyses to date suggest that risk arises from multiple common genetic variants of small effect size, and that very large sample sizes will be needed for detection. This proposal aims to uncover the genomic architecture of PTSD through large-scale, collaborative genome- wide association studies. Identifying the pathways underlying PTSD will lead to an improved neurobiological understanding, enhanced prevention, and improved treatment of this debilitating and prevalent syndrome.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01MH106595-02
Application #
9335458
Study Section
Behavioral Genetics and Epidemiology Study Section (BGES)
Program Officer
Gitik, Miri
Project Start
2016-08-19
Project End
2019-06-30
Budget Start
2017-07-01
Budget End
2018-06-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California, San Diego
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
804355790
City
La Jolla
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
92093
Duncan, Laramie E; Cooper, Bryna N; Shen, Hanyang (2018) Robust Findings From 25 Years of PSTD Genetics Research. Curr Psychiatry Rep 20:115
Nievergelt, Caroline M; Ashley-Koch, Allison E; Dalvie, Shareefa et al. (2018) Genomic Approaches to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: The Psychiatric Genomic Consortium Initiative. Biol Psychiatry 83:831-839
Duncan, L E; Ratanatharathorn, A; Aiello, A E et al. (2018) Largest GWAS of PTSD (N=20?070) yields genetic overlap with schizophrenia and sex differences in heritability. Mol Psychiatry 23:666-673
Wolf, Erika J; Maniates, Hannah; Nugent, Nicole et al. (2018) Traumatic stress and accelerated DNA methylation age: A meta-analysis. Psychoneuroendocrinology 92:123-134
Logue, Mark W; van Rooij, Sanne J H; Dennis, Emily L et al. (2018) Smaller Hippocampal Volume in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Multisite ENIGMA-PGC Study: Subcortical Volumetry Results From Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Consortia. Biol Psychiatry 83:244-253
Ratanatharathorn, Andrew; Boks, Marco P; Maihofer, Adam X et al. (2017) Epigenome-wide association of PTSD from heterogeneous cohorts with a common multi-site analysis pipeline. Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet 174:619-630
Sumner, J A; Duncan, L E; Wolf, E J et al. (2017) Letter to the Editor: Posttraumatic stress disorder has genetic overlap with cardiometabolic traits. Psychol Med 47:2036-2039
Polimanti, Renato; Amstadter, Ananda B; Stein, Murray B et al. (2017) A putative causal relationship between genetically determined female body shape and posttraumatic stress disorder. Genome Med 9:99
Stein, Murray B; Chen, Chia-Yen; Ursano, Robert J et al. (2016) Genome-wide Association Studies of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in 2 Cohorts of US Army Soldiers. JAMA Psychiatry 73:695-704
Dalvie, Shareefa; Koen, Nastassja; McGregor, Nathaniel et al. (2016) Toward a Global Roadmap for Precision Medicine in Psychiatry: Challenges and Opportunities. OMICS 20:557-564

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