Grotewiel Mike, Bettinger Jill C
Department of Human and Molecular Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia.
Virginia Commonwealth University Alcohol Research Center, Richmond, Virginia.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2015 Aug;39(8):1292-311. doi: 10.1111/acer.12785. Epub 2015 Jul 14.
Despite the profound clinical significance and strong heritability of alcohol use disorder (AUD), we do not yet have a comprehensive understanding of the naturally occurring genetic variance within the human genome that drives its development. This lack of understanding is likely to be due in part to the large phenotypic and genetic heterogeneities that underlie human AUD. As a complement to genetic studies in humans, many laboratories are using the invertebrate model organisms (iMOs) Drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly) and Caenorhabditis elegans (nematode worm) to identify genetic mechanisms that influence the effects of alcohol (ethanol) on behavior. While these extremely powerful models have identified many genes that influence the behavioral responses to alcohol, in most cases it has remained unclear whether results from behavioral-genetic studies in iMOs are directly applicable to understanding the genetic basis of human AUD.
In this review, we critically evaluate the utility of the fly and worm models for identifying genes that influence AUD in humans.
Based on results published through early 2015, studies in flies and worms have identified 91 and 50 genes, respectively, that influence 1 or more aspects of behavioral responses to alcohol. Collectively, these fly and worm genes correspond to 293 orthologous genes in humans. Intriguingly, 51 of these 293 human genes have been implicated in AUD by at least 1 study in human populations.
Our analyses strongly suggest that the Drosophila and C. elegans models have considerable utility for identifying orthologs of genes that influence human AUD.
尽管酒精使用障碍(AUD)具有深远的临床意义和很强的遗传性,但我们尚未全面了解人类基因组中驱动其发展的自然发生的遗传变异。这种认识上的不足可能部分归因于人类AUD背后巨大的表型和遗传异质性。作为对人类基因研究的补充,许多实验室正在使用无脊椎动物模式生物(iMOs)黑腹果蝇(果蝇)和秀丽隐杆线虫(线虫)来确定影响酒精(乙醇)对行为作用的遗传机制。虽然这些极其强大的模型已经确定了许多影响对酒精行为反应的基因,但在大多数情况下,iMOs行为遗传学研究的结果是否直接适用于理解人类AUD的遗传基础仍不清楚。
在本综述中,我们批判性地评估了果蝇和线虫模型在鉴定影响人类AUD基因方面的效用。
基于截至2015年初发表的结果,果蝇和线虫的研究分别确定了91个和50个影响对酒精行为反应一个或多个方面的基因。总的来说,这些果蝇和线虫基因对应于人类中的293个直系同源基因。有趣的是,在人类群体的至少一项研究中,这293个人类基因中的51个与AUD有关。
我们的分析有力地表明,果蝇和秀丽隐杆线虫模型在鉴定影响人类AUD基因的直系同源基因方面具有相当大的效用。