Karp R W
Division of Basic Research, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Rockville, Maryland, USA.
Am J Med Genet. 1994 Dec 15;54(4):304-8. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.1320540405.
The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) supports research to elucidate the specific genetic factors, now largely unknown, which underlie susceptibility to alcoholism and its medical complications (including fetal alcohol syndrome). Because of the genetic complexity and heterogeneity of alcoholism, identification of the multiple underlying factors will require the development of new study designs and methods of analysis of data from human families. While techniques of genetic analysis of animal behavioral traits (e.g., targeted gene disruption, quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping) are more powerful than those applicable to humans (e.g., linkage and allelic association studies), the validation of animal behaviors as models of aspects of human alcoholism has been problematic. Newly developed methods for mapping QTL influencing animal behavioral traits can not only permit analyses of human family data to be directly informed by the results of animal studies, but can also serve as a novel means of validating animal models of aspects of alcoholism.
美国国立酒精滥用与酒精中毒研究所(NIAAA)支持开展研究,以阐明目前大多尚不明确的特定遗传因素,这些因素构成了酒精中毒及其医学并发症(包括胎儿酒精综合征)易感性的基础。由于酒精中毒存在遗传复杂性和异质性,要确定多个潜在因素,就需要开发新的研究设计以及分析人类家族数据的方法。虽然对动物行为特征进行遗传分析的技术(例如,靶向基因敲除、数量性状基因座(QTL)定位)比适用于人类的技术(例如,连锁和等位基因关联研究)更强大,但将动物行为验证为人类酒精中毒某些方面的模型一直存在问题。新开发的用于定位影响动物行为特征的QTL的方法,不仅可以让对人类家族数据的分析直接借鉴动物研究的结果,还可以作为验证酒精中毒某些方面动物模型的一种新手段。