Johnson Julie A, Lima John J
University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32610-0486, USA.
Pharmacogenetics. 2003 Sep;13(9):525-34. doi: 10.1097/00008571-200309000-00001.
The pharmacogenetics literature of drug receptors and effector proteins is in its relative infancy compared to that of drug metabolism pharmacogenetics. Nonetheless, in a short time period, numerous studies have demonstrated that receptor/effector polymorphisms contribute to variable drug response. We review the current status, and list challenges that confront drug target pharmacogenetics before we can use genetic information in drug-therapy decision-making. We focus our review on G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs), which represent over 50% of all drug targets, and use specific examples from the beta-adrenergic receptor pharmacogenetic literature to illustrate important issues. Recent resequencing efforts of GPCR genes suggest that they have more coding region and nonsynonymous polymorphisms than non-GPCR genes, thus making GPCRs important foci for pharmacogenetic investigation. Our inability to use drug target genetic information to guide in the selection of drug therapy is due to several factors, including (i) the relatively subtle functional effects of the single gene polymorphisms, which do not account for enough of the drug response variability to accurately predict response and (ii) inconsistencies between studies. The latter may be due to some studies having inadequate sample sizes, studying different drug response phenotypes and patient populations, difficulties in identifying and measuring a valid drug response phenotype, and focusing on single polymorphisms in single genes, rather than haplotypes or multiple genes. To move the field to the point of clinical application, future studies will need to be larger, and will have to consider the complexity of the drug response, either by inclusion of polymorphisms from signal transduction proteins and other proteins relevant to the drug response, or through a genomics approach. Finally, the literature suggests that, for those drugs with multiple pharmacologic effects, or effects in multiple organs, the genetic contribution to each drug response phenotype will have to be considered separately. The knowledge necessary to move forward on all these fronts is not yet available, but will be increasingly accessible over the next few years.
与药物代谢药物遗传学相比,药物受体和效应蛋白的药物遗传学文献尚处于相对起步阶段。尽管如此,在短时间内,大量研究已表明受体/效应器多态性会导致药物反应的差异。在我们能够将遗传信息用于药物治疗决策之前,我们回顾了当前的状况,并列出了药物靶点药物遗传学面临的挑战。我们的综述重点关注G蛋白偶联受体(GPCR),其占所有药物靶点的50%以上,并使用β-肾上腺素能受体药物遗传学文献中的具体例子来说明重要问题。最近对GPCR基因的重测序研究表明,它们比非GPCR基因具有更多的编码区和非同义多态性,因此使GPCR成为药物遗传学研究的重要焦点。我们无法利用药物靶点遗传信息来指导药物治疗的选择,这是由几个因素导致的,包括(i)单基因多态性的功能效应相对微妙,不足以解释足够多的药物反应变异性以准确预测反应,以及(ii)研究之间的不一致性。后者可能是由于一些研究样本量不足,研究不同的药物反应表型和患者群体,难以识别和测量有效的药物反应表型,以及专注于单个基因中的单态性而非单倍型或多个基因。为了将该领域推进到临床应用阶段,未来的研究需要更大规模,并且必须考虑药物反应的复杂性,要么通过纳入信号转导蛋白和与药物反应相关的其他蛋白的多态性,要么通过基因组学方法。最后,文献表明,对于那些具有多种药理作用或在多个器官中有作用的药物,必须分别考虑每种药物反应表型的遗传贡献。在所有这些方面取得进展所需的知识目前尚不可用,但在未来几年将越来越容易获得。