Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Transl Psychiatry. 2013 Aug 13;3(8):e290. doi: 10.1038/tp.2013.63.
Cigarette smoking is influenced both by genetic and environmental factors. Until this year, all large-scale gene identification studies on smoking were conducted in populations of European ancestry. Consequently, the genetic architecture of smoking is not well described in other populations. Further, despite a rich epidemiologic literature focused on the social determinants of smoking, few studies have examined the moderation of genetic influences (for example, gene-environment interactions) on smoking in African Americans. In the Detroit Neighborhood Health Study (DNHS), a sample of randomly selected majority African American residents of Detroit, we constructed a genetic risk score (GRS), in which we combined top (P-value <5 × 10(-7)) genetic variants from a recent meta-analysis conducted in a large sample of African Americans. Using regression (effective n=399), we first tested for association between the GRS and cigarettes per day, attempting to replicate the findings from the meta-analysis. Second, we examined interactions with three social contexts that may moderate the genetic association with smoking: traumatic events, neighborhood social cohesion and neighborhood physical disorder. Among individuals who had ever smoked cigarettes, the GRS significantly predicted the number of cigarettes smoked per day and accounted for ~3% of the overall variance in the trait. Significant interactions were observed between the GRS and number of traumatic events experienced, as well as between the GRS and average neighborhood social cohesion; the association between genetic risk and smoking was greater among individuals who had experienced an increased number of traumatic events in their lifetimes, and diminished among individuals who lived in a neighborhood characterized by greater social cohesion. This study provides support for the utility of the GRS as an alternative approach to replication of common polygenic variation, and in gene-environment interaction, for smoking behaviors. In addition, this study indicates that environmental determinants have the potential to both exacerbate (traumatic events) and diminish (neighborhood social cohesion) genetic influences on smoking behaviors.
吸烟既受遗传因素又受环境因素的影响。截至今年,所有关于吸烟的大规模基因识别研究都是在欧洲血统的人群中进行的。因此,吸烟的遗传结构在其他人群中描述得并不完善。此外,尽管有大量流行病学文献集中研究了吸烟的社会决定因素,但很少有研究探讨遗传影响(例如,基因-环境相互作用)对非裔美国人吸烟的调节作用。在底特律社区健康研究(DNHS)中,我们选择了底特律的随机抽取的大多数非裔美国居民作为样本,构建了一个遗传风险评分(GRS),其中我们结合了最近在一个大型非裔美国人样本中进行的荟萃分析中的最高(P 值<5×10(-7))遗传变异。使用回归(有效 n=399),我们首先测试了 GRS 与每天吸烟量之间的关联,试图复制荟萃分析的结果。其次,我们研究了与三种社会背景的相互作用,这些背景可能会调节与吸烟的遗传关联:创伤事件、邻里社会凝聚力和邻里物理混乱。在曾经吸烟的个体中,GRS 显著预测了每天吸烟的数量,占该特征总方差的~3%。在经历的创伤事件数量和平均邻里社会凝聚力之间观察到了显著的相互作用;遗传风险与吸烟之间的关联在一生中经历过更多创伤事件的个体中更大,而在生活在邻里关系更紧密的个体中则减弱。这项研究为 GRS 作为复制常见多基因变异和基因-环境相互作用的替代方法,以及用于吸烟行为的复制提供了支持。此外,这项研究表明,环境决定因素有可能加剧(创伤事件)和减弱(邻里社会凝聚力)遗传对吸烟行为的影响。