Otto Jacqueline M, Gizer Ian R, Ellingson Jarrod M, Wilhelmsen Kirk C
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia.
Department of Genetics and Neurology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2017 May;31(3):354-366. doi: 10.1037/adb0000270. Epub 2017 Apr 3.
Shared genetic factors represent one underlying mechanism thought to contribute to high rates of alcohol and tobacco co-use and dependence. Common variants identified by molecular genetic studies tend to confer only small disease risk, and rare protein-coding variants are posited to contribute to disease risk, as well. However, given that genotyping technologies allowing for their inclusion in association studies have only recently become available, the magnitude of their contribution is poorly understood. The current study examined genetic variation in protein-coding regions (i.e., the exome) for associations with measures of lifetime alcohol and tobacco co-use. Participants from the UCSF Family Alcoholism Study (N = 1,862) were genotyped using an exome-focused genotyping array, and assessed for DSM-IV diagnoses of alcohol and tobacco dependence and quantitative consumption measures using a modified version of the Semi-Structured Assessment for the Genetics of Alcoholism. Analyses included single variant, gene-based, and pathway-based tests of association. One EMR3 variant and a pathway related to genes upregulated in mesenchymal stem cells during the late phase of adipogenesis met criteria for statistical significance. Suggestive associations were consistent with previous findings from studies of substance use and dependence, including variants in the CHRNA5-CHRNA3-CHRNB4 gene cluster with cigarettes smoked per day. Further, several variants and genes demonstrated suggestive association across phenotypes, suggesting that shared genetic factors may underlie risk for increased levels of alcohol and tobacco use, as well as psychopathology more broadly, providing insight into our understanding of the genetic architecture underlying these traits. (PsycINFO Database Record
共同的遗传因素是一种潜在机制,被认为是导致酒精和烟草共同使用及依赖的高发生率的原因之一。分子遗传学研究确定的常见变异往往只赋予较小的疾病风险,而罕见的蛋白质编码变异也被认为会导致疾病风险。然而,鉴于允许将其纳入关联研究的基因分型技术直到最近才出现,其贡献程度仍知之甚少。当前的研究检查了蛋白质编码区域(即外显子组)的遗传变异与终生酒精和烟草共同使用量度之间的关联。来自加州大学旧金山分校家庭酒精中毒研究(N = 1862)的参与者使用以外显子组为重点的基因分型阵列进行基因分型,并使用酒精中毒遗传学半结构化评估的修改版对酒精和烟草依赖的DSM-IV诊断以及定量消费指标进行评估。分析包括单变异、基于基因和基于通路的关联测试。一个EMR3变异和一个与脂肪生成后期间充质干细胞中上调基因相关的通路符合统计学显著性标准。提示性关联与先前关于物质使用和依赖研究的结果一致,包括CHRNA5-CHRNA3-CHRNB4基因簇中的变异与每日吸烟量的关联。此外,几个变异和基因在不同表型之间显示出提示性关联,表明共同的遗传因素可能是酒精和烟草使用水平增加以及更广泛的精神病理学风险的基础,为我们理解这些特征背后的遗传结构提供了见解。(PsycINFO数据库记录)