BACKGROUND: Whether current criteria used to define nicotine dependence are informative for genetic research is an important empirical question. The authors used items of the DSM-IV and of the Heaviness of Smoking Index to characterize the nicotine dependence phenotype and to identify salient symptoms in a genetically informative community sample of Australian young adult female and male twins. METHOD: Phenotypic and genetic factor analyses were performed on nine dependence symptoms (the seven DSM-IV substance dependence criteria and the two Heaviness of Smoking Index (HSI) items derived from the Fagerström Tolerance Questionnaire, time to first cigarette in the morning and number of cigarettes smoked per day). Phenotypic and genetic analyses were restricted to ever smokers. RESULTS: Phenotypic nicotine dependence symptom covariation was best captured by two factors with a similar pattern of factor loadings for women and men. In genetic factor analysis item covariation was best captured by two genetic but one shared environmental factor for both women and men; however, item factor loadings differed by gender. All nicotine dependence symptoms were substantially heritable, except for the DSM-IV criterion of 'giving up or reducing important activities in order to smoke', which was weakly familial. CONCLUSIONS: The salient behavioral indices of nicotine dependence are similar for women and men. DSM-IV criteria of tolerance, withdrawal, and experiencing difficulty quitting and HSI items time to first cigarette in the morning and number of cigarettes smoked per day may represent the most highly heritable symptoms of nicotine dependence for both women and men.
BACKGROUND: Whether current criteria used to define nicotine dependence are informative for genetic research is an important empirical question. The authors used items of the DSM-IV and of the Heaviness of Smoking Index to characterize the nicotine dependence phenotype and to identify salient symptoms in a genetically informative community sample of Australian young adult female and male twins. METHOD: Phenotypic and genetic factor analyses were performed on nine dependence symptoms (the seven DSM-IV substance dependence criteria and the two Heaviness of Smoking Index (HSI) items derived from the Fagerström Tolerance Questionnaire, time to first cigarette in the morning and number of cigarettes smoked per day). Phenotypic and genetic analyses were restricted to ever smokers. RESULTS: Phenotypic nicotine dependence symptom covariation was best captured by two factors with a similar pattern of factor loadings for women and men. In genetic factor analysis item covariation was best captured by two genetic but one shared environmental factor for both women and men; however, item factor loadings differed by gender. All nicotine dependence symptoms were substantially heritable, except for the DSM-IV criterion of 'giving up or reducing important activities in order to smoke', which was weakly familial. CONCLUSIONS: The salient behavioral indices of nicotine dependence are similar for women and men. DSM-IV criteria of tolerance, withdrawal, and experiencing difficulty quitting and HSI items time to first cigarette in the morning and number of cigarettes smoked per day may represent the most highly heritable symptoms of nicotine dependence for both women and men.
Authors: George R Uhl; Tomas Drgon; Catherine Johnson; Marco F Ramoni; Frederique M Behm; Jed E Rose Journal: Mol Med Date: 2010-08-24 Impact factor: 6.354
Authors: Porat M Erlich; Stuart N Hoffman; Margaret Rukstalis; John J Han; Xin Chu; W H Linda Kao; Glenn S Gerhard; Walter F Stewart; Joseph A Boscarino Journal: Hum Genet Date: 2010-08-20 Impact factor: 4.132
Authors: Laura Jean Bierut; Pamela A F Madden; Naomi Breslau; Eric O Johnson; Dorothy Hatsukami; Ovide F Pomerleau; Gary E Swan; Joni Rutter; Sarah Bertelsen; Louis Fox; Douglas Fugman; Alison M Goate; Anthony L Hinrichs; Karel Konvicka; Nicholas G Martin; Grant W Montgomery; Nancy L Saccone; Scott F Saccone; Jen C Wang; Gary A Chase; John P Rice; Dennis G Ballinger Journal: Hum Mol Genet Date: 2006-12-07 Impact factor: 6.150
Authors: Li-Shiun Chen; Eric O Johnson; Naomi Breslau; Dorothy Hatsukami; Nancy L Saccone; Richard A Grucza; Jen C Wang; Anthony L Hinrichs; Louis Fox; Alison M Goate; John P Rice; Laura J Bierut Journal: Addiction Date: 2009-10 Impact factor: 6.526
Authors: Keran Jiang; Zhongli Yang; Wenyan Cui; Kunkai Su; Jennie Z Ma; Thomas J Payne; Ming D Li Journal: Nicotine Tob Res Date: 2019-05-21 Impact factor: 4.244
Authors: Robert A Philibert; Tracy D Gunter; Steven R H Beach; Gene H Brody; Anup Madan Journal: Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet Date: 2008-07-05 Impact factor: 3.568
Authors: Jen C Wang; Carlos Cruchaga; Nancy L Saccone; Sarah Bertelsen; Pengyuan Liu; John P Budde; Weimin Duan; Louis Fox; Richard A Grucza; Jason Kern; Kevin Mayo; Oliver Reyes; John Rice; Scott F Saccone; Noah Spiegel; Joseph H Steinbach; Jerry A Stitzel; Marshall W Anderson; Ming You; Victoria L Stevens; Laura J Bierut; Alison M Goate Journal: Hum Mol Genet Date: 2009-05-14 Impact factor: 6.150