| Literature DB >> 31089300 |
Nana Matoba1, Masato Akiyama1,2, Kazuyoshi Ishigaki1, Masahiro Kanai1,3, Atsushi Takahashi1,4, Yukihide Momozawa5, Shiro Ikegawa6, Masashi Ikeda7, Nakao Iwata7, Makoto Hirata8, Koichi Matsuda9, Michiaki Kubo10, Yukinori Okada1,11,12, Yoichiro Kamatani13,14.
Abstract
Cigarette smoking is a risk factor for a wide range of human diseases1. To investigate the genetic components associated with smoking behaviours in the Japanese population, we conducted a genome-wide association study of four smoking-related traits using up to 165,436 individuals. In total, we identified seven new loci, including three loci associated with the number of cigarettes per day (EPHX2-CLU, RET and CUX2-ALDH2), three loci associated with smoking initiation (DLC1, CXCL12-TMEM72-AS1 and GALR1-SALL3) and LINC01793-MIR4432HG, associated with the age of smoking initiation. Of these, three loci (LINC01793-MIR4432HG, CXCL12-TMEM72-AS1 and GALR1-SALL3) were found by conducting an additional sex-stratified genome-wide association study. This additional analysis showed heterogeneity of effects between sexes. The cross-sex linkage disequilibrium score regression2,3 analysis also indicated that the genetic component of smoking initiation was significantly different between the sexes. Cross-trait linkage disequilibrium score regression analysis and trait-relevant tissue analysis showed that the number of cigarettes per day has a specific genetic background distinct from those of the other three smoking behaviours. We also report 11 diseases that share genetic basis with smoking behaviours. Although the current study should be carefully considered owing to the lack of replication samples, our findings characterized the genetic architecture of smoking behaviours. Further studies in East Asian populations are warranted to confirm our findings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31089300 DOI: 10.1038/s41562-019-0557-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Hum Behav ISSN: 2397-3374