Goldman D
Laboratory of Neurogenetics, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.
Recent Dev Alcohol. 1993;11:231-48.
This chapter is an overview of developments in the study of genetic factors in vulnerability in alcoholism. The focus is on recent developments, including heritability studies in twins and transmission studies in families, both of which have continued to reveal evidence for a substantial role for genetic factors but also for etiologic complexity and variation in vulnerability across generations and across cultures. Studies are discussed which utilized psychophysiological and neurochemical markers for alcoholism for analysis of genetic association, transmission, and linkage. These markers include the low P300 event-related potential, sensitivity to ethanol's intoxicating and euphoric effects, platelet adenylate cyclase, and neurotransmitter metabolite concentrations. Although it is highly likely that many alcoholism-associated physiologic phenotypes are secondary traits, these approaches have increased the specificity of genetic analyses and genetic analyses are clarifying their relationship to alcoholism. For example, early efforts to study, in families, the co-occurrence of the P300 marker and alcoholism have yielded results indicating that the P300 abnormality precedes significant exposure to alcohol and that relatives of alcoholics are more likely to have this trait. In the area of animal models, two nonhuman primate species, the vervet monkey and the rhesus macaque, were shown to willingly consume alcohol to intoxicating blood levels. Also, linkage studies using the quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping strategy were attempted for phenotypes relevant for alcoholism. The QTL strategy is theoretically capable of identifying determinant genes which contribute only a small portion of the variance. In human linkage studies, a genetic association was found to the DRD2 dopamine receptor. The DRD2 finding generated controversy, as a number of other groups failed to replicate it, and also focused attention on the advantages and pitfalls of the population association approach for detecting genes influencing behavior. The relationship of the alcohol metabolic gene variants to alcoholism was clarified by the finding that functional variants of alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenases can act additively to determine vulnerability to alcoholism.
本章概述了酒精中毒易感性遗传因素研究的进展。重点是近期的进展,包括双胞胎的遗传度研究和家族中的传递研究,这两项研究都不断揭示出遗传因素起重要作用的证据,同时也表明病因复杂,且代际和文化间的易感性存在差异。讨论了利用酒精中毒的心理生理和神经化学标记进行遗传关联、传递和连锁分析的研究。这些标记包括低P300事件相关电位、对乙醇中毒和欣快作用的敏感性、血小板腺苷酸环化酶以及神经递质代谢物浓度。尽管许多与酒精中毒相关的生理表型很可能是次要性状,但这些方法提高了遗传分析的特异性,并且遗传分析正在阐明它们与酒精中毒的关系。例如,早期在家族中研究P300标记与酒精中毒共现情况的努力已得出结果,表明P300异常在大量饮酒之前就已出现,且酗酒者的亲属更有可能具有这一性状。在动物模型领域,研究表明两种非人类灵长类动物,即绿猴和恒河猴,会自愿摄入酒精直至血液达到中毒水平。此外,还尝试使用数量性状基因座(QTL)定位策略对与酒精中毒相关的表型进行连锁研究。QTL策略理论上能够识别仅导致一小部分变异的决定性基因。在人类连锁研究中,发现了与DRD2多巴胺受体的遗传关联。DRD2这一发现引发了争议,因为其他一些研究小组未能重复这一结果,同时也将注意力集中在群体关联方法在检测影响行为的基因方面的优势和缺陷上。酒精代谢基因变异与酒精中毒的关系通过以下发现得以阐明,即酒精和乙醛脱氢酶的功能变异可累加作用以决定对酒精中毒的易感性。