Tylee Daniel S, Chandler Sharon D, Nievergelt Caroline M, Liu Xiaohua, Pazol Joel, Woelk Christopher H, Lohr James B, Kremen William S, Baker Dewleen G, Glatt Stephen J, Tsuang Ming T
Psychiatric Genetic Epidemiology & Neurobiology Laboratory (PsychGENe Lab), Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences & Neuroscience and Physiology, Medical Genetics Research Center, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY, USA.
Center for Behavioral Genomics, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, La Jolla, San Diego, CA, USA.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2015 Jan;51:472-94. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2014.09.024. Epub 2014 Sep 30.
The etiology of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) likely involves the interaction of numerous genes and environmental factors. Similarly, gene-expression levels in peripheral blood are influenced by both genes and environment, and expression levels of many genes show good correspondence between peripheral blood and brain tissues. In that context, this pilot study sought to test the following hypotheses: (1) post-trauma expression levels of a gene subset in peripheral blood would differ between Marines with and without PTSD; (2) a diagnostic biomarker panel of PTSD among high-risk individuals could be developed based on gene-expression in readily assessable peripheral blood cells; and (3) a diagnostic panel based on expression of individual exons would surpass the accuracy of a model based on expression of full-length gene transcripts. Gene-expression levels in peripheral blood samples from 50 U.S. Marines (25 PTSD cases and 25 non-PTSD comparison subjects) were determined by microarray following their return from deployment to war-zones in Iraq or Afghanistan. The original sample was carved into training and test subsets for construction of support vector machine classifiers. The panel of peripheral blood biomarkers achieved 80% prediction accuracy in the test subset based on the expression of just two full-length transcripts (GSTM1 and GSTM2). A biomarker panel based on 20 exons attained an improved 90% accuracy in the test subset. Though further refinement and replication of these biomarker profiles are required, these preliminary results provide proof-of-principle for the diagnostic utility of blood-based mRNA-expression in PTSD among trauma-exposed individuals.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的病因可能涉及众多基因与环境因素的相互作用。同样,外周血中的基因表达水平受基因和环境两者影响,并且许多基因的表达水平在外周血和脑组织之间显示出良好的对应关系。在此背景下,这项初步研究旨在检验以下假设:(1)患有和未患有PTSD的海军陆战队队员外周血中一个基因子集的创伤后表达水平会有所不同;(2)基于易于评估的外周血细胞中的基因表达,可以为高危个体开发出PTSD的诊断生物标志物组;(3)基于单个外显子表达的诊断组将超过基于全长基因转录本表达的模型的准确性。对50名美国海军陆战队队员(25例PTSD患者和25名非PTSD对照受试者)从伊拉克或阿富汗战区部署归来后的外周血样本中的基因表达水平进行了微阵列测定。将原始样本划分为训练子集和测试子集,用于构建支持向量机分类器。基于仅两个全长转录本(GSTM1和GSTM2)的表达,外周血生物标志物组在测试子集中实现了80%的预测准确率。基于20个外显子的生物标志物组在测试子集中的准确率提高到了90%。尽管这些生物标志物谱需要进一步优化和重复验证,但这些初步结果为创伤暴露个体中基于血液的mRNA表达在PTSD诊断中的实用性提供了原理证明。