| Literature DB >> 24652602 |
Stuart J Ritchie1, Timothy C Bates, Janie Corley, Geraldine McNeill, Gail Davies, David C Liewald, John M Starr, Ian J Deary.
Abstract
Studies of the effect of alcohol consumption on cognitive ability are often confounded. One approach to avoid confounding is the Mendelian randomization design. Here, we used such a design to test the hypothesis that a genetic score for alcohol processing capacity moderates the association between alcohol consumption and lifetime change in cognitive ability. Members of the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936 completed the same test of intelligence at age 11 and 70 years. They were assessed for recent alcohol consumption in later life and genotyped for a set of four single-nucleotide polymorphisms in three alcohol dehydrogenase genes. These variants were unrelated to late-life cognition or to socioeconomic status. We found a significant gene × alcohol consumption interaction on lifetime cognitive change (p = 0.007). Individuals with higher genetic ability to process alcohol showed relative improvements in cognitive ability with more consumption, whereas those with low processing capacity showed a negative relationship between cognitive change and alcohol consumption with more consumption. The effect of alcohol consumption on cognitive change may thus depend on genetic differences in the ability to metabolize alcohol.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24652602 PMCID: PMC4082597 DOI: 10.1007/s11357-014-9638-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Age (Dordr) ISSN: 0161-9152
Fig. 1Theoretical model of alcohol’s effect on lifetime cognitive change. SNPs causing differences in alcohol metabolism interact with the alcohol consumption: Those with few rare alleles (and a corresponding higher rate of alcohol metabolism) have lower biological exposure to damaging effects of alcohol and thus a relative IQ improvement from alcohol consumption. The opposite effect occurs in those with many rare alleles, resulting in relative IQ decline. Variables inside the dashed box were not directly measured in the present study
Gene, alleles and minor-allele frequency (MAF), and imputation R 2 for each SNP
| Gene | SNP rs-number | Alleles | MAF | Imputation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| rs2866151 | A/T | 0.452 | 0.987 |
| rs975833 | G/C | 0.216 | 0.999 | |
|
| rs4147536a | C/A | 0.235 | – |
|
| rs284779 | G/C | 0.470 | 0.610 |
aDirectly genotyped SNP; other SNPs imputed
Fig. 2Histogram of four-SNP set scores (total number of rare/minor alleles from rs2866151, rs975833, rs4147536, and rs284779)
Linear regression model predicting age 70 cognitive ability (measured by the Moray House Test) from demographic variables, alcohol consumption, and four-SNP genotype score
| Predictor |
| SE |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | −2.65 (−4.04 to −1.27) | 0.71 | −3.75 | <0.001 |
| Age 11 cognitive ability (MHT) | 0.55 (0.50 to 0.61) | 0.03 | 20.85 | <0.001 |
| Origin SES | 0.03 (−0.71 to 0.76) | 0.38 | 0.08 | 0.93 |
| Attained SES | −0.47 (−1.26 to 0.33) | 0.41 | −1.15 | 0.25 |
| Years of education | 1.37 (0.67 to 2.07) | 0.36 | 3.83 | <0.001 |
| Smoking status: ex-smoker | 0.34 (−1.05 to 1.74) | 0.71 | 0.48 | 0.63 |
| Smoking status: current smoker | −2.45 (−4.77 to −0.14) | 1.18 | −2.08 | 0.04 |
| Alcohol consumption (log g per day) | 2.93 (0.62 to 5.24) | 1.17 | 2.50 | 0.01 |
| Four-SNP score | 2.40 (0.49 to 4.31) | 0.97 | 2.47 | 0.01 |
| Alcohol consumption × SNP score interaction | −1.13 (−1.94 to −0.31) | 0.42 | −2.72 | 0.007 |
Overall regression adjusted R = 0.48, F (10,766) = 72.83, p < 0.001. For sex, negative coefficients reflect lower values for females. The alcohol consumption measure was log-normalized. SES variables were treated as continuous for the purposes of analysis. For smoking, “never smoked” was the reference category
MHT Moray House Test; SES socioeconomic status
Fig. 3Lifetime cognitive change (age ∼70 cognitive ability adjusted for age ∼11 cognitive ability and confounders) against alcohol consumption, split by SNP set score quartile (quartiles are for illustration; note that analysis was performed on a continuous SNP score). Higher scores on the y-axis indicate better cognitive ability later in life. Higher SNP set scores indicate a greater number of rare alleles