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GWAS in interaction with childhood traumas implicates novel variants and genes previously associated with suicide-related factors in the background of suicidal ideation

IntroductionAlthough suicide claims more lives than war and homicide, we still have no sufficient and effective methods either for its prediction or for its prevention. Our screening methods are laborous and subjective both on the side of the patient and on the side of the clinician. Understanding t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European psychiatry 2024-08, Vol.67 (S1), p.S336-S337
Main Authors: Gonda, X, Krause, S, Erdelyi-Hamza, B, Sutori, S, Gal, Z, Eszlari, N, Bagdy, G, Juhasz, G, Torok, D
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:IntroductionAlthough suicide claims more lives than war and homicide, we still have no sufficient and effective methods either for its prediction or for its prevention. Our screening methods are laborous and subjective both on the side of the patient and on the side of the clinician. Understanding the genetic background of suicidal behaviour would help identify biomarkers for screening as well as pathways as potential targets for novel intervention and prevention approaches. However, in spite of a number of GWAS studies, results are few and rarely replicate, and generally accurate phenotyping and sufficient consideration of environmental stressors is also missing.ObjectivesIn our present study we performed a genome-wide analysis study for suicidal ideation in interaction with early childhood traumas in a deep-phenotyped general population sample.MethodsOur analysis used data from 1800 volunteers in the NewMood project. As outcome phenotype the suicidal ideation item of the Brief Symptom Inventory was used. A modified version of the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire was used to assess early adverse experiences. A genome-wide association analysis was performed with Plink 1.9, including a total of 3,474,641 variants after quality control steps, followed by genome-wide by environment interaction analyses. Our models included control variables for sex, age, and the top 10 genomic principal components. Functional annotation of SNPs was carried out using FUMA v1.5.6, gene-based tests were performed using MAGMA v1.08.Results7 SNPs met suggestive significance in main effect analyses, of which 2 reached genome-wide significance including rs79912020 (p=3.21E-10, β=0.746) and rs10236520 (p=1.71E-08, β=0.484), with no significant findings in gene-based tests. Interaction analyses with childhood adversities yielded 31 SNPs that met genome-wide significance, including rs7983955 (p=2.28E-11, β=0.182), rs141039461 (p=3.90E-11, β=0.0541), rs12692827 (p=3.69E-10, β=0.0612) as the top SNPs. In interaction with childhood adversities, 31 genes showed a significant association in gene-based tests, including RBFOX1 (p=1.09E-10), GRM7 (p=1.20E-10), MTCH1 (p=5.59E-09), and CDH13 (p=6.60E-09) as the most significant findings.ConclusionsOur results indicate several important novel SNPs associated with suicidal ideation when considered in interaction with the effect of childhood adversities. Furthermore, gene-based analyses replicate several genes playing a key role in central nervous sy
ISSN:0924-9338
1778-3585
DOI:10.1192/j.eurpsy.2024.695