Dick Danielle M, Bierut Laura, Hinrichs Anthony, Fox Louis, Bucholz Kathleen K, Kramer John, Kuperman Samuel, Hesselbrock Victor, Schuckit Marc, Almasy Laura, Tischfield Jay, Porjesz Bernice, Begleiter Henri, Nurnberger John, Xuei Xiaoling, Edenberg Howard J, Foroud Tatiana
Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Behav Genet. 2006 Jul;36(4):577-90. doi: 10.1007/s10519-005-9041-8. Epub 2006 Mar 24.
We use findings from the behavior genetics literature about how genetic factors (latently) influence alcohol dependence and related disorders to develop and test hypotheses about the risk associated with a specific gene, GABRA2, across different developmental stages. This gene has previously been associated with adult alcohol dependence in the Collaborative Study of the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA) sample [Edenberg, H. J., Dick, D. M., Xuei, X., Tian, H., Almasy, L., Bauer, L. O., Crowe, R., Goate, A., Hesselbrock, V., Jones, K. A., Kwon, J., Li, T. K., Nurnberger Jr., J. I., O'Connor, S. J., Reich, T., Rice, J., Schuckit, M., Porjesz, B., Foroud, T., and Begleiter, H. (2004). Am. J. Hum. Genet. 74:705-714] and other studies [Covault, J., Gelernter, J., Hesselbrock, V., Nellissery, M., and Kranzler, H. R. (2004). Am. J. Med. Genet. B Neuropsychiatr. Genet. 129B:104-109; Lappalainen, J., Krupitsky, E., Remizov, M., Pchelina, S., Taraskina, A., Zvartau, E., Somberg, L. K., Covault, J., Kranzler, H. R., Krystal, J., and Gelernter, J. (2005). Alcohol. Clin. Exp. Res. 29:493-498]. In a sample of children and adolescents ascertained as part of the COGA project, we find that GABRA2 is significantly associated with childhood conduct disorder symptoms, but not with childhood alcohol dependence symptoms. A consistent elevation in risk for alcohol dependence associated with GABRA2 is not evident until the mid-20s and then remains throughout adulthood. GABRA2 is also associated with other drug dependence in our sample, both in adolescence and adulthood.
我们运用行为遗传学文献中的研究结果,这些结果关乎遗传因素如何(潜在地)影响酒精依赖及相关障碍,以此来提出并检验关于特定基因GABRA2在不同发育阶段所涉风险的假设。此前,在酒精中毒遗传学合作研究(COGA)样本中,该基因已被证实与成人酒精依赖有关[伊登伯格,H. J.,迪克,D. M.,薛伊,X.,田,H.,阿尔马西,L.,鲍尔,L. O.,克罗,R.,戈特,A.,赫塞尔布罗克,V.,琼斯,K. A.,权,J.,李,T. K.,小努尔伯格,J. I.,奥康纳,S. J.,赖希,T.,赖斯,J.,舒基特,M.,波尔耶什,B.,福鲁德,T.,以及贝格莱特,H.(2004年)。《美国人类遗传学杂志》74卷:第705 - 714页]以及其他研究[科沃尔特,J.,盖勒恩特,J.,赫塞尔布罗克,V.,内利塞里,M.,以及克兰兹勒,H. R.(2004年)。《美国医学遗传学杂志B:神经精神遗传学》129B卷:第104 - 109页;拉帕莱宁,J.,克鲁皮茨基,E.,雷米佐夫,M.,切尔纳,S.,塔拉什基娜,A.,兹瓦尔陶,E.,索姆伯格,L. K.,科沃尔特,J.,克兰兹勒,H. R.,克里斯托,J.,以及盖勒恩特,J.(2005年)。《酒精临床与实验研究》29卷:第493 - 498页]。在作为COGA项目一部分确定的儿童和青少年样本中,我们发现GABRA2与儿童期品行障碍症状显著相关,但与儿童期酒精依赖症状无关。直到25岁左右,与GABRA2相关的酒精依赖风险持续升高的情况才明显显现,随后在整个成年期一直存在。在我们的样本中,GABRA2在青少年期和成年期也与其他药物依赖有关。