Polimanti Renato, Zhang Huiping, Smith Andrew H, Zhao Hongyu, Farrer Lindsay A, Kranzler Henry R, Gelernter Joel
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine and VA CT Healthcare Center, West Haven, CT, USA.
Medical Scientist Training Program and Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Addict Biol. 2017 Mar;22(2):535-549. doi: 10.1111/adb.12317. Epub 2015 Oct 12.
Outcomes related to disordered metabolism are common in alcohol dependence (AD). To investigate alterations in the regulation of body mass that occur in the context of AD, we performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of body mass index (BMI) in African Americans (AAs) and European Americans (EAs) with AD. Subjects were recruited for genetic studies of AD or drug dependence and evaluated using the Semi-structured Assessment for Drug Dependence and Alcoholism. We investigated a total of 2587 AAs and 2959 EAs with DSM-IV AD diagnosis. In the stage 1 sample (N = 4137), we observed three genome-wide significant (GWS) single-nucleotide polymorphism associations, rs200889048 (P = 8.98 * 10 ) and rs12490016 (P = 1.44 * 10 ) in EAs and rs1630623 (P = 5.14 * 10 ) in AAs and EAs meta-analyzed. In the stage 2 sample (N = 1409), we replicated 278, 253 and 168 of the stage 1 suggestive loci (P < 5*10 ) in AAs, EAs, and AAs and EAs meta-analyzed, respectively. A meta-analysis of stage 1 and stage 2 samples (N = 5546) identified two additional GWS signals: rs28562191 in EAs (P = 4.46 * 10 ) and rs56950471 in AAs (P = 1.57 * 10 ). Three of the GWS loci identified (rs200889048, rs12490016 and rs1630623) were not previously reported by GWAS of BMI in the general population, and two of them raise interesting hypotheses: rs12490016-a regulatory variant located within LINC00880, where there are other GWAS-identified variants associated with birth size, adiposity in newborns and bulimia symptoms, which also interact with social stress in relation to birth size; rs1630623-a regulatory variant related to ALDH1A1, a gene involved in alcohol metabolism and adipocyte plasticity. These loci offer molecular insights regarding the regulatory mechanisms of body mass in the context of AD.
与代谢紊乱相关的后果在酒精依赖(AD)中很常见。为了研究在AD背景下发生的体重调节变化,我们对患有AD的非裔美国人(AAs)和欧裔美国人(EAs)进行了体重指数(BMI)的全基因组关联研究(GWAS)。研究对象因AD或药物依赖的基因研究而被招募,并使用药物依赖和酒精中毒半结构化评估进行评估。我们共调查了2587名被诊断为DSM-IV AD的非裔美国人和2959名欧裔美国人。在第1阶段样本(N = 4137)中,我们观察到三个全基因组显著(GWS)单核苷酸多态性关联,在欧裔美国人中有rs200889048(P = 8.98×10 )和rs12490016(P = 1.44×10 ),在非裔美国人和欧裔美国人的荟萃分析中有rs1630623(P = 5.14×10 )。在第2阶段样本(N = 1409)中,我们分别在非裔美国人、欧裔美国人以及非裔美国人和欧裔美国人的荟萃分析中重复了第1阶段提示性位点(P < 5×10 )中的278个、253个和168个。对第1阶段和第2阶段样本(N = 5546)的荟萃分析又确定了另外两个GWS信号:欧裔美国人中的rs28562191(P = 4.46×10 )和非裔美国人中的rs56950471(P = 1.57×10 )。所确定的三个GWS位点(rs200889048、rs12490016和rs1630623)在一般人群的BMI全基因组关联研究中以前未被报道,其中两个提出了有趣的假设:rs12490016——一个位于LINC00880内的调控变异,在该位置还有其他全基因组关联研究确定的与出生大小、新生儿肥胖和神经性贪食症状相关的变异,这些变异在出生大小方面也与社会压力相互作用;rs1630623——一个与ALDH1A1相关的调控变异,ALDH1A1是一个参与酒精代谢和脂肪细胞可塑性的基因。这些位点为AD背景下体重的调控机制提供了分子层面的见解。