Kilcoyne Bari, Shmulewitz Dvora, Meyers Jacquelyn L, Aharonovich Efrat, Greenstein Eliana, Frisch Amos, Weizman Abraham, Spivak Baruch, Edenberg Howard J, Gelernter Joel, Hasin Deborah S
Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York.
Department of Psychiatry, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2014 Jul;75(4):635-42. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2014.75.635.
A single nucleotide variation in the alcohol dehydrogenase 1B (ADH1B) gene, rs1229984, produces an ADH1B enzyme with faster acetaldehyde production. This protective variant is associated with lower alcohol consumption and lower risk for alcohol use disorders (AUDs). Based on the premise that faster ADH1B kinetics decreases alcohol consumption, we formally tested if the association between ADH1B variant rs1229984 and AUDs occurs through consumption. We also tested whether the association between rs1229984 and each of the 11 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV), AUD criteria occurs through consumption.
A total of 1,130 lifetime drinkers from an Israeli household sample were assessed with a structured interview and genotyped for rs1229984 (protective allele frequency = 0.28). Logistic regression evaluated the association between rs1229984 and each phenotype (AUDs, 11 individual DSM-IV criteria). For phenotypes significantly related to rs1229984, the effect through consumption was tested with logistic regression and bootstrapping.
ADH1B rs1229984 was significantly associated with AUDs and six criteria, with odds ratios ranging from 1.32 to 1.96. The effect through consumption was significant for these relationships, explaining 23%-74% of the total ADH1B effect.
This is the first study to show that ADH1B rs1229984 is related to 6 of the 11 DSM-IV AUD criteria and that alcohol consumption explained a significant proportion of these associations and the association of ADH1B with AUDs. Better understanding of the relationship between ADH1B and the DSM-IV AUD criteria, including effects through consumption, will enhance our understanding of the etiologic model through which AUDs can occur.
酒精脱氢酶1B(ADH1B)基因中的单核苷酸变异rs1229984可产生一种能更快生成乙醛的ADH1B酶。这种保护性变异与较低的酒精摄入量以及较低的酒精使用障碍(AUD)风险相关。基于ADH1B动力学加快会降低酒精摄入量这一前提,我们正式检验了ADH1B变异rs1229984与AUD之间的关联是否通过酒精摄入量产生。我们还检验了rs1229984与《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)中11项AUD标准中的每一项之间的关联是否通过酒精摄入量产生。
对来自以色列家庭样本的1130名终生饮酒者进行结构化访谈评估,并对rs1229984进行基因分型(保护性等位基因频率 = 0.28)。逻辑回归分析评估rs1229984与每种表型(AUD、11项个体DSM-IV标准)之间的关联。对于与rs1229984显著相关的表型,通过逻辑回归和自抽样检验酒精摄入量所产生的影响。
ADH1B rs1229984与AUD以及六项标准显著相关,优势比在1.32至1.96之间。酒精摄入量所产生的影响在这些关系中具有显著性,解释了ADH1B总效应的23% - 74%。
本研究首次表明,ADH1B rs1229984与DSM-IV的11项AUD标准中的6项相关,且酒精摄入量在很大程度上解释了这些关联以及ADH1B与AUD之间的关联。更好地理解ADH1B与DSM-IV AUD标准之间的关系,包括酒精摄入量所产生的影响,将增进我们对AUD病因模型的理解。