| Literature DB >> 19570274 |
Nancy Nairi Maserejian1, Athanasios I Zavras.
Abstract
The worldwide prevalence of tobacco use is widespread, resulting in nearly 4.5 million deaths every year. Nicotine is addictive and has psychopharmacological effects that maintain the use of tobacco products. Several studies have documented a strong hereditary component to tobacco use. The present article reviews results from twin and adoption studies and proceeds to present association studies of specific genes that may be involved in tobacco use. Cholinergic receptor nicotinic beta polypeptide 2, serotonin receptor and transporter genes, dopamine receptor and transporter genes, and the cytochrome P450A6 gene are reviewed. Linkage studies help to identify regions of the genome that may be worth further investigation. The paper concludes with a discussion of the limitations of genetic research and the future of genetic epidemiology in this domain.Entities:
Year: 2004 PMID: 19570274 PMCID: PMC2671538 DOI: 10.1186/1617-9625-2-2-81
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Induc Dis ISSN: 1617-9625 Impact factor: 2.600
Epidemiologic studies of tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH) gene, serotonin transporter gene and tobacco use in human populations.
| Lerman 2001 | USA N = 451 | TPH A/A, A/C, C/C | A/A genotype is associated with younger age at smoking initiation |
| Sullivan 2001 | USA N = 780 | TPH C218A and C779A | Allele frequency, genotype, and haplotype are associated with smoking initiation |
| Lerman 2000 | USA N = 185 smokers | Serotonin Transporter 5-HTTLPR S/* | Interaction between genotype and neuroticism in nicotine intake, dependence and smoking motivations; neuroticism pre-dicted these behaviors among smokers with the S allele, but not among those with the L allele (no significant main effects of genotype) |
| Hu 2000 | USA N = 759 | Serotonin Transporter 5-HTTLPR S/* vs. L/L | Interaction between genotype and neuroticism in smoking status, initiation and cessation; neuroticism predicted these behaviors among smokers with the S allele, but not among those with the L allele (no significant main effects of geno-type) |
| Ishikawa 1999 | Japan N = 496 men | Serotonin Transporter 5-HTTLPR L/* vs. S/S | L allele predicts increased smoking |
| Lerman 1998 | USA N = 498 | Serotonin Transporter 5-HTTLPR S/S, S/L, L/L | No significant differences by genotype |
a. A * denotes an allele other than the one noted
b. Increased smoking refers to comparisons between current, former and never or non-smokers (reference group)
Epidemiologic studies of dopamine receptor gene (DRD2), dopamine transporter gene (SLC6A3) and tobacco use in human populations.
| Erblich 2004 | USA N = 108 smokers | SLC6A3-9/* | SLC6A3-9/* increases number of cigarettes/day |
| DRD2 A1/* | SLC6A3-9/* & DRD2 A1/* exhibit greater cigarette craving reactions | ||
| Additive interaction of both gene variants | |||
| Vandenbergh 2002 | USA N = 595 | SLC6A3-10/10, 9/10, 9/9 | SLC6A3-9/* predicts increased smoking |
| Yoshida 2001 | Japan N = 332 | DRD2 A1/A1, A1/A2, A2/A2 | A2 predicts increased smoking |
| Wu 2000 | USA N = 140 lung cancer cases and 222 controls | DRD2 A1/A1, A1/A2, A2/A2 | DRD2 predicts increased smoking, pack-years and number of cigarettes/day |
| DRD2 B1/B1, B1/B2, B2/B2 | A1 & case status interact to increase risk of family history of smoking-related cancer | ||
| Beirut 2000 | USA N = 970 Alcoholism study subjects and their first-degree relatives | DRD2 A1/* vs. A2/A2 | No significant differences by genotype |
| Lerman 1999 | USA N = 522 | DRD2 A1/* vs. A2/A2 | SLC6A3-9/* predicts non-smoking, older age at initiation of smoking, and longer previous quit attempts |
| SLC6A3-9/* vs. */* | DRD2-A1/* predicts smoking only through interaction with SLC6A3 | ||
| Sabol 1999 | USA N = 1,107 | SLC6A3-9/* vs. */* | SLC6A3-9/* predicts smoking cessation & low novelty-seeking |
| DRD2 A1/* vs. A2/A2 | |||
| Spitz 1998 | USA N = 283 | DRD2 A1/* vs. A2/A2 | DRD2 A1/* or B1/* predict increased smoking, younger age at initiation & fewer attempts to quit |
| DRD2 B1/* vs. B2/B2 | |||
| Comings 1996 | USA N = 1026 (479 of which are from literature) | DRD2 A1/* vs. */* | DRD2 A1/* predicts smoking |
| Noble 1994 | USA N = 354 | DRD2 A1/* vs. A2/A2 | DRD2 A1/* predicts increased smoking |
| Smith 1992 | USA N = 232 | DRD2 A1/* vs. A2/A2 | DRD2 A1/* or B1/* predict increased substance use |
| DRD2 B1/* vs. B2/B2 | |||
a. A * denotes an allele other than the one noted
b. Increased smoking refers to comparisons between current, former and never or non-smokers (reference group)
Epidemiologic studies of dopamine receptor gene (DRD4) and tobacco use in human populations.
| Luciano 2004 | Australia N = 769 single twins | DRD4 48-base pair repeat polymorphism | No significant association or linkage tests |
| Hutchinson 2002 | USA N = 68 | DRD4 L/* | Interaction between genotype and response to smoking cues: DRD4 L/*, but not S/S, have increased craving, attention, arousal, and decreased positive affect during exposure to smoking cues |
| No main effect of DRD4 on novelty seeking, nicotine dependence, smoking history or response to smoking cues. | |||
| Lerman 1998 | USA N = 231 smokers | DRD4 L/* vs. S/S | Interaction between depression and genotype: depressed smokers with S/S are more likely to practice stimulation smoking and negative-affect reduction smoking; effect not seen in L/* genotypes |
| No main effect of DRD4 on depression, stimulation smoking, negative-affect reduction smoking or nicotine dependence. | |||
| Shields 1998 | USA N = 430 | DRD4 L/* vs. S/S | In African-Americans: L/* predicts increased smoking, shorter time to first cigarette in the morning and earlier age at smoking initiation. No L/* genotype smokers were abstinent 2 months after smoking cessation counseling, vs. 35% of S/S genotype smokers |
| No significant association with genotype and smoking in Caucasians. | |||
a A * denotes an allele other than the one noted.
Epidemiologic studies of cytochrome P450 2A6 (CYP2A6), nicotine metabolization and tobacco use in human populations.
| Xu 2002 | Canada N = 14 in kinetic substudy N = 478 in allele frequency study | Wild-type CYP2A6*1/*1 vs. *4/*4, *4/*10, *4/*7, *7/*7, *1/*8 | Homozygous wild-type genotypes CYP2A6*1/1 have lower plasma levels of nicotine and higher levels of the CYP2A6-mediated nicotine metabolite cotinine, compared to those with the null *4/4 genotype (6 hours after oral administration of nicotine) |
| *7/*7 genotypes or *7 in combination with gene deletion have intermediate levels of nicotine | |||
| One individual containing both *7 and *8 (CYP2A6*4/*10) has sharply reduced metabolism of both nicotine and cotinine | |||
| Rao 2000 | Canada N = 296 smokers | CYP2A6*1/*1 vs. *1/*4, *1/2, *2/2, or *1/*1 plus duplication | Smokers with reduced activity or null alleles (*2/2, *1/2 or *1/4) use fewer cigarettes/day compared to those with wild-type (*1/*1) genotype both currently (13.5 ± 2.3 vs. 19.5 ± 0.7) and at time of heaviest smoking (19 vs. 29), and have lower cotinine Levels |
| Kitagawa 1999 | Japan N = 11 smokers in smoking challenge sub-study N = 252 in genotype study | CYP2A6*1/1 vs. homozygous deletion | Homozygous wild-type genotypes CYP2A6*1/1 have higher cotinine concentrations in urine than homozygously deleted genotypes (average concentration 3.87 ± 1.64 vs. 0.40 ± 0.15 ③ g/ml at 1.5 hours after smoking for 1 hr.) |
| On average over the 24-hr period following smoking challenge, cotinine excretion in homozygously deleted genotypes was one-seventh compared to control group (p < 0.001) | |||
| Pianezza 1998 | Canada N = 428 | CYP2A6*1/1 vs. null alleles *2 or *3 | Dependent smokers have lower frequency of null alleles, compared to the never-dependent control group (12.3% vs. 19.6%, p < 0.04, OR = 1.74, 95% CI 1.02–2.94) |
| Smokers heterozygous for null alleles have fewer number of cigarettes/week (129 vs. 159, t-test p < 0.02), compared to smokers with two active alleles | |||
a. We have used the nomenclature system for CYP2A6 alleles recommended by the Human Cytochrome P450 Allele Nomenclature Committee (available at )