Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, 1285 Franz Hall, Box 951563, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1563, USA.
Genes Brain Behav. 2013 Jun;12(4):361-9. doi: 10.1111/gbb.12032. Epub 2013 Apr 4.
The corticotropin-releasing hormone type I receptor (CRHR1) gene has been implicated in the liability for neuropsychiatric disorders, particularly under conditions of stress. On the basis of the hypothesized effects of CRHR1 variation on stress reactivity, measures of adulthood traumatic stress exposure were analyzed for their interaction with CRHR1 haplotypes and single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in predicting the risk for alcoholism. Phenotypic data on 2533 non-related Caucasian individuals (1167 alcoholics and 1366 controls) were culled from the publically available Study of Addiction: Genetics and Environment genome-wide association study. Genotypes were available for 19 tag SNPs. Logistic regression models examined the interaction between CRHR1 haplotypes/SNPs and adulthood traumatic stress exposure in predicting alcoholism risk. Two haplotype blocks spanned CRHR1. Haplotype analyses identified one haplotype in the proximal block 1 (P = 0.029) and two haplotypes in the distal block 2 (P = 0.026, 0.042) that showed nominally significant (corrected P < 0.025) genotype × traumatic stress interactive effects on the likelihood of developing alcoholism. The block 1 haplotype effect was driven by SNPs rs110402 (P = 0.019) and rs242924 (P = 0.019). In block 2, rs17689966 (P = 0.018) showed significant and rs173365 (P = 0.026) showed nominally significant, gene × environment (G × E) effects on alcoholism status. This study extends the literature on the interplay between CRHR1 variation and alcoholism, in the context of exposure to traumatic stress. These findings are consistent with the hypothesized role of the extra hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing factor system dysregulation in the initiation and maintenance of alcoholism. Molecular and experimental studies are needed to more fully understand the mechanisms of risk and protection conferred by genetic variation at the identified loci.
促肾上腺皮质激素释放激素 I 型受体 (CRHR1) 基因与神经精神疾病的易感性有关,尤其是在应激条件下。基于 CRHR1 变异对应激反应的假设影响,分析了成年期创伤性应激暴露的测量值,以研究其与 CRHR1 单倍型和单核苷酸多态性 (SNP) 之间的相互作用,预测酗酒风险。从公开的成瘾研究:遗传学和环境全基因组关联研究中筛选了 2533 名非相关白种人个体(1167 名酗酒者和 1366 名对照者)的表型数据。可获得 19 个标记 SNP 的基因型。逻辑回归模型检查了 CRHR1 单倍型/SNP 与成年期创伤性应激暴露在预测酗酒风险方面的相互作用。两个单倍型块跨越了 CRHR1。单倍型分析在近端块 1 中确定了一个单倍型(P = 0.029),在远端块 2 中确定了两个单倍型(P = 0.026,0.042),它们在发展为酗酒的可能性方面表现出名义上显著的(校正 P < 0.025)基因型×创伤性应激交互作用。块 1 单倍型效应由 rs110402(P = 0.019)和 rs242924(P = 0.019)驱动。在块 2 中,rs17689966(P = 0.018)表现出显著的基因×环境(G × E)效应,rs173365(P = 0.026)表现出名义上显著的效应,对酗酒状态有影响。这项研究扩展了关于 CRHR1 变异与酗酒之间相互作用的文献,在暴露于创伤性应激的背景下。这些发现与下丘脑外促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子系统失调在酗酒的发生和维持中的假设作用一致。需要进行分子和实验研究,以更全面地了解所确定基因座的遗传变异赋予的风险和保护机制。