Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, West Haven, CT 06516, USA.
Alcohol Alcohol. 2013 Jan-Feb;48(1):9-14. doi: 10.1093/alcalc/ags104. Epub 2012 Sep 27.
Some of the well-known functional alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) gene variants (e.g. ADH1B2, ADH1B3 and ADH1C*2) that significantly affect the risk of alcohol dependence are rare variants in most populations. In the present study, we comprehensively examined the associations between rare ADH variants [minor allele frequency (MAF) <0.05] and alcohol dependence, with several other neuropsychiatric and neurological disorders as reference.
A total of 49,358 subjects in 22 independent cohorts with 11 different neuropsychiatric and neurological disorders were analyzed, including 3 cohorts with alcohol dependence. The entire ADH gene cluster (ADH7-ADH1C-ADH1B-ADH1A-ADH6-ADH4-ADH5 at Chr4) was imputed in all samples using the same reference panels that included whole-genome sequencing data. We stringently cleaned the phenotype and genotype data to obtain a total of 870 single nucleotide polymorphisms with 0< MAF <0.05 for association analysis.
We found that a rare variant constellation across the entire ADH gene cluster was significantly associated with alcohol dependence in European-Americans (Fp1: simulated global P = 0.045), European-Australians (Fp5: global P = 0.027; collapsing: P = 0.038) and African-Americans (Fp5: global P = 0.050; collapsing: P = 0.038), but not with any other neuropsychiatric disease. Association signals in this region came principally from ADH6, ADH7, ADH1B and ADH1C. In particular, a rare ADH6 variant constellation showed a replicable association with alcohol dependence across these three independent cohorts. No individual rare variants were statistically significantly associated with any disease examined after group- and region-wide correction for multiple comparisons.
We conclude that rare ADH variants are specific for alcohol dependence. The ADH gene cluster may harbor a causal variant(s) for alcohol dependence.
一些众所周知的功能性乙醇脱氢酶(ADH)基因变异(例如 ADH1B2、ADH1B3 和 ADH1C*2)显著影响酒精依赖的风险,而在大多数人群中这些都是罕见变异。在本研究中,我们综合研究了罕见 ADH 变异(次要等位基因频率(MAF)<0.05)与酒精依赖之间的关联,并将其他一些神经精神和神经疾病作为参照。
对 22 个独立队列中的 49358 名受试者进行了分析,这些队列涉及 11 种不同的神经精神和神经疾病,包括 3 个酒精依赖队列。使用相同的参考面板对所有样本进行了整个 ADH 基因簇(ADH7-ADH1C-ADH1B-ADH1A-ADH6-ADH4-ADH5 在 Chr4 上)的全基因组测序数据进行了推断。我们严格清理了表型和基因型数据,共获得了 870 个 0<MAF<0.05 的单核苷酸多态性用于关联分析。
我们发现整个 ADH 基因簇的罕见变异组合在欧洲裔美国人中与酒精依赖显著相关(Fp1:模拟全球 P=0.045)、欧洲裔澳大利亚人(Fp5:全球 P=0.027;合并:P=0.038)和非裔美国人(Fp5:全球 P=0.050;合并:P=0.038),但与任何其他神经精神疾病无关。该区域的关联信号主要来自 ADH6、ADH7、ADH1B 和 ADH1C。特别是,罕见的 ADH6 变异组合在这三个独立队列中与酒精依赖具有可复制的关联。在进行组间和全区域的多重比较校正后,没有单个罕见变异与任何被检查的疾病具有统计学显著关联。
我们的结论是,罕见的 ADH 变异与酒精依赖有关。ADH 基因簇可能携带有酒精依赖的因果变异。