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Dive into the research topics where Andrew Ratanatharathorn is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew Ratanatharathorn.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2017

Largest GWAS of PTSD (N=20 070) yields genetic overlap with schizophrenia and sex differences in heritability

Laramie Duncan; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Allison E. Aiello; Lynn M. Almli; Ananda B. Amstadter; Allison E. Ashley-Koch; Dewleen G. Baker; Jean C. Beckham; Laura J. Bierut; J Bisson; Bekh Bradley; C-Y Chen; Shareefa Dalvie; Lindsay A. Farrer; Sandro Galea; Melanie E. Garrett; Joel Gelernter; Guia Guffanti; Michael A. Hauser; Eric O. Johnson; Ronald C. Kessler; Nathan A. Kimbrel; Anthony P. King; Nastassja Koen; Henry R. Kranzler; Mark W. Logue; Ax Maihofer; Ar Martin; Mark W. Miller; Rajendra A. Morey

The Psychiatric Genomics Consortium-Posttraumatic Stress Disorder group (PGC-PTSD) combined genome-wide case–control molecular genetic data across 11 multiethnic studies to quantify PTSD heritability, to examine potential shared genetic risk with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depressive disorder and to identify risk loci for PTSD. Examining 20 730 individuals, we report a molecular genetics-based heritability estimate (h2SNP) for European-American females of 29% that is similar to h2SNP for schizophrenia and is substantially higher than h2SNP in European-American males (estimate not distinguishable from zero). We found strong evidence of overlapping genetic risk between PTSD and schizophrenia along with more modest evidence of overlap with bipolar and major depressive disorder. No single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) exceeded genome-wide significance in the transethnic (overall) meta-analysis and we do not replicate previously reported associations. Still, SNP-level summary statistics made available here afford the best-available molecular genetic index of PTSD—for both European- and African-American individuals—and can be used in polygenic risk prediction and genetic correlation studies of diverse phenotypes. Publication of summary statistics for ∼10 000 African Americans contributes to the broader goal of increased ancestral diversity in genomic data resources. In sum, the results demonstrate genetic influences on the development of PTSD, identify shared genetic risk between PTSD and other psychiatric disorders and highlight the importance of multiethnic/racial samples. As has been the case with schizophrenia and other complex genetic disorders, larger sample sizes are needed to identify specific risk loci.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2014

Genetic association analysis of 300 genes identifies a risk haplotype in SLC18A2 for post-traumatic stress disorder in two independent samples

Nadia Solovieff; Andrea L. Roberts; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Michelle Haloosim; Immaculata De Vivo; Anthony P. King; Israel Liberzon; Allison E. Aiello; Monica Uddin; Derek E. Wildman; Sandro Galea; Jordan W. Smoller; Shaun Purcell; Karestan C. Koenen

The genetic architecture of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) remains poorly understood with the vast majority of genetic association studies reporting on single candidate genes. We conducted a large genetic study in trauma-exposed European-American women (N=2538; 845 PTSD cases, 1693 controls) by testing 3742 SNPs across more than 300 genes and conducting polygenic analyses using results from the Psychiatric Genome-Wide Association Studies Consortium (PGC). We tested the association between each SNP and two measures of PTSD, a severity score and diagnosis. We found a significant association between PTSD (diagnosis) and SNPs (top SNP: rs363276, odds ratio (OR)=1.4, p=2.1E-05) in SLC18A2 (vesicular monoamine transporter 2). A haplotype analysis of 9 SNPs in SLC18A2, including rs363276, identified a risk haplotype (CGGCGGAAG, p=0.0046), and the same risk haplotype was associated with PTSD in an independent cohort of trauma-exposed African-Americans (p=0.049; N=748, men and women). SLC18A2 is involved in transporting monoamines to synaptic vesicles and has been implicated in a number of neuropsychiatric disorders including major depression. Eight genes previously associated with PTSD had SNPs with nominally significant associations (p<0.05). The polygenic analyses suggested that there are SNPs in common between PTSD severity and bipolar disorder. Our data are consistent with a genetic architecture for PTSD that is highly polygenic, influenced by numerous SNPs with weak effects, and may overlap with mood disorders. Genome-wide studies with very large samples sizes are needed to detect these types of effects.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2015

An analysis of gene expression in PTSD implicates genes involved in the glucocorticoid receptor pathway and neural responses to stress.

Mark W. Logue; Alicia K. Smith; Clinton T. Baldwin; Erika J. Wolf; Guia Guffanti; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Annjanette Stone; Steven A. Schichman; Donald E. Humphries; Elisabeth B. Binder; Janine Arloth; Andreas Menke; Monica Uddin; Derek E. Wildman; Sandro Galea; Allison E. Aiello; Karestan C. Koenen; Mark W. Miller

We examined the association between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and gene expression using whole blood samples from a cohort of trauma-exposed white non-Hispanic male veterans (115 cases and 28 controls). 10,264 probes of genes and gene transcripts were analyzed. We found 41 that were differentially expressed in PTSD cases versus controls (multiple-testing corrected p<0.05). The most significant was DSCAM, a neurological gene expressed widely in the developing brain and in the amygdala and hippocampus of the adult brain. We then examined the 41 differentially expressed genes in a meta-analysis using two replication cohorts and found significant associations with PTSD for 7 of the 41 (p<0.05), one of which (ATP6AP1L) survived multiple-testing correction. There was also broad evidence of overlap across the discovery and replication samples for the entire set of genes implicated in the discovery data based on the direction of effect and an enrichment of p<0.05 significant probes beyond what would be expected under the null. Finally, we found that the set of differentially expressed genes from the discovery sample was enriched for genes responsive to glucocorticoid signaling with most showing reduced expression in PTSD cases compared to controls.


Psychological Medicine | 2017

Posttraumatic stress disorder in the World Mental Health Surveys

Karestan C. Koenen; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Lauren C. Ng; Kelsey McLaughlin; Evelyn J. Bromet; Dan J. Stein; Elie G. Karam; A. Meron Ruscio; Corina Benjet; Kate M. Scott; Lukoye Atwoli; M. Petukhova; Carmen C. W. Lim; Aguilar-Gaxiola. S.; A. Al-Hamzawi; J. Alonso; Brendan Bunting; Marius Ciutan; G. de Girolamo; Louisa Degenhardt; Oye Gureje; J. M. Haro; Yueqin Huang; Norito Kawakami; Sven J. van der Lee; Fernando Navarro-Mateu; Beth Ellen Pennell; Marina Piazza; Nancy A. Sampson; M. ten Have

BACKGROUND Traumatic events are common globally; however, comprehensive population-based cross-national data on the epidemiology of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the paradigmatic trauma-related mental disorder, are lacking. METHODS Data were analyzed from 26 population surveys in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys. A total of 71 083 respondents ages 18+ participated. The Composite International Diagnostic Interview assessed exposure to traumatic events as well as 30-day, 12-month, and lifetime PTSD. Respondents were also assessed for treatment in the 12 months preceding the survey. Age of onset distributions were examined by country income level. Associations of PTSD were examined with country income, world region, and respondent demographics. RESULTS The cross-national lifetime prevalence of PTSD was 3.9% in the total sample and 5.6% among the trauma exposed. Half of respondents with PTSD reported persistent symptoms. Treatment seeking in high-income countries (53.5%) was roughly double that in low-lower middle income (22.8%) and upper-middle income (28.7%) countries. Social disadvantage, including younger age, female sex, being unmarried, being less educated, having lower household income, and being unemployed, was associated with increased risk of lifetime PTSD among the trauma exposed. CONCLUSIONS PTSD is prevalent cross-nationally, with half of all global cases being persistent. Only half of those with severe PTSD report receiving any treatment and only a minority receive specialty mental health care. Striking disparities in PTSD treatment exist by country income level. Increasing access to effective treatment, especially in low- and middle-income countries, remains critical for reducing the population burden of PTSD.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2016

Glucocorticoid receptor DNA methylation, childhood maltreatment and major depression

Angela C. Bustamante; Allison E. Aiello; Sandro Galea; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Carol Noronha; Derek E. Wildman; Monica Uddin

INTRODUCTION Altered DNA methylation (DNAm) levels of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis genes has been associated with exposure to childhood maltreatment (CM) and depression; however, it is unknown whether CM and depression have joint and potentially interacting effects on the glucocorticoid receptor (NR3C1) DNAm. We investigated the impact of CM and lifetime major depressive disorder (MDD) on NR3C1 DNAm and gene expression (GE) in 147 adult participants from the Detroit Neighborhood Health Study. METHODS NR3C1 promoter region DNAm was assessed via pyrosequencing using whole blood-derived DNA. Quantitative RT-PCR assays measured GE from leukocyte-derived RNA. Linear regression models were used to examine the relationship among CM, MDD, and DNAm. RESULTS Both CM and MDD were significant predictors of NR3C1 DNAm: CM was associated with an increase in DNAm in an EGR1 transcription factor binding site (TFBS), whereas MDD was associated with a decrease in DNAm downstream of the TFBS. No significant CM-MDD interactions were observed. CM alone was associated with significantly lower NR3C1 GE. LIMITATIONS Our report of CM is a retrospective self-report of abuse, which may introduce recall bias. DNAm was measured in whole blood and may not reflect brain-derived DNAm levels. CONCLUSIONS CM and MDD are both associated with altered DNAm levels in the NR3C1 promoter region, however the location and direction of effects differ between the two exposures, and the functional effects, as measured by GE, appear to be limited to CM exposure alone. CM exposure may be biologically embedded in this key HPA axis gene.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2017

Epigenome-wide association of PTSD from heterogeneous cohorts with a common multi-site analysis pipeline.

Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Marco P. Boks; Adam X. Maihofer; Allison E. Aiello; Ananda B. Amstadter; Allison E. Ashley-Koch; Dewleen G. Baker; Jean C. Beckham; Evelyn J. Bromet; Michelle F. Dennis; Melanie E. Garrett; Elbert Geuze; Guia Guffanti; Michael A. Hauser; Varun Kilaru; Nathan A. Kimbrel; Karestan C. Koenen; Pei Fen Kuan; Mark W. Logue; Benjamin J. Luft; Mark W. Miller; Colter Mitchell; Nicole R. Nugent; Kerry J. Ressler; Bart P.F. Rutten; Murray B. Stein; Eric Vermetten; Christiaan H. Vinkers; Nagy A. Youssef; Monica Uddin

Compelling evidence suggests that epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation play a role in stress regulation and in the etiologic basis of stress related disorders such as Post traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Here we describe the purpose and methods of an international consortium that was developed to study the role of epigenetics in PTSD. Inspired by the approach used in the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, we brought together investigators representing seven cohorts with a collective sample size of N = 1147 that included detailed information on trauma exposure, PTSD symptoms, and genome‐wide DNA methylation data. The objective of this consortium is to increase the analytical sample size by pooling data and combining expertise so that DNA methylation patterns associated with PTSD can be identified. Several quality control and analytical pipelines were evaluated for their control of genomic inflation and technical artifacts with a joint analysis procedure established to derive comparable data over the cohorts for meta‐analysis. We propose methods to deal with ancestry population stratification and type I error inflation and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of applying robust error estimates. To evaluate our pipeline, we report results from an epigenome‐wide association study (EWAS) of age, which is a well‐characterized phenotype with known epigenetic associations. Overall, while EWAS are highly complex and subject to similar challenges as genome‐wide association studies (GWAS), we demonstrate that an epigenetic meta‐analysis with a relatively modest sample size can be well‐powered to identify epigenetic associations. Our pipeline can be used as a framework for consortium efforts for EWAS.


Translational Psychiatry | 2015

Frequency of alcohol consumption in humans; the role of metabotropic glutamate receptors and downstream signaling pathways

Jacquelyn L. Meyers; M C Salling; Lynn M. Almli; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Monica Uddin; Sandro Galea; Derek E. Wildman; Allison E. Aiello; Bekh Bradley; Kerry J. Ressler; Karestan C. Koenen

Rodent models implicate metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) and downstream signaling pathways in addictive behaviors through metaplasticity. One way mGluRs can influence synaptic plasticity is by regulating the local translation of AMPA receptor trafficking proteins via eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (eEF2). However, genetic variation in this pathway has not been examined with human alcohol use phenotypes. Among a sample of adults living in Detroit, Michigan (Detroit Neighborhood Health Study; n=788; 83% African American), 206 genetic variants across the mGluR–eEF2–AMPAR pathway (including GRM1, GRM5, HOMER1, HOMER2, EEF2K, MTOR, EIF4E, EEF2, CAMK2A, ARC, GRIA1 and GRIA4) were found to predict number of drinking days per month (corrected P-value <0.01) when considered as a set (set-based linear regression conducted in PLINK). In addition, a CpG site located in the 3′-untranslated region on the north shore of EEF2 (cg12255298) was hypermethylated in those who drank more frequently (P<0.05). Importantly, the association between several genetic variants within the mGluR–eEF2–AMPAR pathway and alcohol use behavior (i.e., consumption and alcohol-related problems) replicated in the Grady Trauma Project (GTP), an independent sample of adults living in Atlanta, Georgia (n=1034; 95% African American), including individual variants in GRM1, GRM5, EEF2, MTOR, GRIA1, GRIA4 and HOMER2 (P<0.05). Gene-based analyses conducted in the GTP indicated that GRM1 (empirical P<0.05) and EEF2 (empirical P<0.01) withstood multiple test corrections and predicted increased alcohol consumption and related problems. In conclusion, insights from rodent studies enabled the identification of novel human alcohol candidate genes within the mGluR–eEF2–AMPAR pathway.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2014

No association between RORA polymorphisms and PTSD in two independent samples

Guia Guffanti; Allison E. Ashley-Koch; Andrea L. Roberts; Melanie E. Garrett; Nadia Solovieff; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; I. De Vivo; Michelle F. Dennis; Hardeep Ranu; Jordan W. Smoller; Yangfan P. Liu; Shaun Purcell; Mira Brancu; Patrick S. Calhoun; Eric B. Elbogen; John A. Fairbank; Jeffrey M. Hoerle; Kimberly T. Green; Harold Kudler; Christine E. Marx; Scott D. Moore; Rajendra A. Morey; Jennifer C. Naylor; Jennifer J. Runnals; Larry A. Tupler; Richard D. Weiner; Elizabeth E. Van Voorhees; Marinell Miller-Mumford; Scott D. McDonald; Treven C. Pickett

Logue et al.1 reported genome-wide significant association between a polymorphism (rs8042149) in the RORA gene, encoding the retinoic acid orphan receptor A, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a cohort of trauma-exposed white non-Hispanic US veterans and their partners. The genome-wide association study yielded evidence of association for three additional SNPs at the 10-6 threshold in the same cohort (rs8041061, rs8024133, rs11071561). Amstadter et al.2 reported a significant association between rs8042149 and PTSD symptoms in the 2004 Florida Hurricane Study. The RORA gene encodes a nuclear hormone receptor that regulates the transcription activity of nearby genes. It is widely expressed in the brain, where it protects cortical neurons against oxidative stress-induced apoptosis by increasing the expression of antioxidant proteins.1 Logue et al.1 proposed that genetic variations in RORA may alter its expression, reducing the capacity of neurons to respond to biochemical stressors induced by traumatic stress.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2017

Traumatic stress and accelerated DNA methylation age: A meta-analysis

Erika J. Wolf; Hannah Maniates; Nicole R. Nugent; Adam X. Maihofer; Don Armstrong; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Allison E. Ashley-Koch; Melanie E. Garrett; Nathan A. Kimbrel; Adriana Lori; Va Mid-Atlantic Mirecc Workgroup; Allison E. Aiello; Dewleen G. Baker; Jean C. Beckham; Marco P. Boks; Sandro Galea; Elbert Geuze; Michael A. Hauser; Ronald C. Kessler; Karestan C. Koenen; Mark W. Miller; Kerry J. Ressler; Victoria B. Risbrough; Bart P.F. Rutten; Murray B. Stein; Robert J. Ursano; Eric Vermetten; Christiaan H. Vinkers; Monica Uddin; Alicia K. Smith

BACKGROUND Recent studies examining the association between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and accelerated aging, as defined by DNA methylation-based estimates of cellular age that exceed chronological age, have yielded mixed results. METHODS We conducted a meta-analysis of trauma exposure and PTSD diagnosis and symptom severity in association with accelerated DNA methylation age using data from 9 cohorts contributing to the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium PTSD Epigenetics Workgroup (combined N = 2186). Associations between demographic and cellular variables and accelerated DNA methylation age were also examined, as was the moderating influence of demographic variables. RESULTS Meta-analysis of regression coefficients from contributing cohorts revealed that childhood trauma exposure (when measured with the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire) and lifetime PTSD severity evidenced significant, albeit small, meta-analytic associations with accelerated DNA methylation age (ps = 0.028 and 0.016, respectively). Sex, CD4T cell proportions, and natural killer cell proportions were also significantly associated with accelerated DNA methylation age (all ps < 0.02). PTSD diagnosis and lifetime trauma exposure were not associated with advanced DNA methylation age. There was no evidence of moderation of the trauma or PTSD variables by demographic factors. CONCLUSIONS Results suggest that traumatic stress is associated with advanced epigenetic age and raise the possibility that cells integral to immune system maintenance and responsivity play a role in this. This study highlights the need for additional research into the biological mechanisms linking traumatic stress to accelerated DNA methylation age and the importance of furthering our understanding of the neurobiological and health consequences of PTSD.


Depression and Anxiety | 2017

Posttraumatic stress disorder and accelerated aging: PTSD and leukocyte telomere length in a sample of civilian women

Andrea L. Roberts; Karestan C. Koenen; Qixuan Chen; Paola Gilsanz; Susan M. Mason; Jennifer Prescott; Andrew Ratanatharathorn; Eric B. Rimm; Jennifer A. Sumner; Ashley Winning; Immaculata De Vivo; Laura D. Kubzansky

Studies in male combat veterans have suggested posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is associated with shorter telomere length (TL). We examined the cross‐sectional association of PTSD with TL in women exposed to traumas common in civilian life.

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Allison E. Aiello

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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