Abstract

Epigenetic alterations are regarded as a potential mechanism mediating the effects of environmental risk factors on vulnerability for a range of mental health problems. Recent studies have addressed the question whether DNA methylation patterns predict the outcome of psychological interventions and whether treatment effects might be associated with changes of DNA methylation. We assessed phobic fear symptoms, treatment-relevant traits and treatment response in 308 adults free of psychotropic medication - highly fearful of either spiders, blood-injury-injections, dental-treatments or heights - all subjected to highly standardized exposure-based one-session fear treatment. DNA methylation level of the promotor region of the serotonin transporter gene (SLC6A4) was assessed in either saliva samples (spider and dental treatment fear cohorts) or oral mucosa (BII, heights) to check whether possible effects are independent of the surrogate tissue examined. Moreover, in order to examine possible DNA methylation by genotype effects, patients were assessed for genetic variation of the serotonin transporter-linked polymorphic region (5-HTTLPR). DNA methylation levels were neither associated with pre-treatment fear levels, treatment relevant traits or treatment outcome data even when allelic variation of the 5HTTLPR was considered. Overall DNA methylation levels were higher in saliva samples compared to buccal samples. In saliva samples there was a small pre- to post-treatment increase in DNA methylation, which, however, was also not associated with the investigated phenotypes. We conclude that DNA methylation of SLC6A4 is no suitable biomarker for response efficacy to highly standardized one-session exposure-based fear treatments.

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