| Literature DB >> 31090166 |
Dongbing Lai1, Leah Wetherill1, Sarah Bertelsen2, Caitlin E Carey3, Chella Kamarajan4, Manav Kapoor2, Jacquelyn L Meyers4, Andrey P Anokhin5, David A Bennett6, Kathleen K Bucholz5, Katharine K Chang3, Philip L De Jager7,8, Danielle M Dick9, Victor Hesselbrock10, John Kramer11, Samuel Kuperman11, John I Nurnberger1,12, Towfique Raj2, Marc Schuckit13, Denise M Scott14,15, Robert E Taylor16, Jay Tischfield17, Ahmad R Hariri18, Howard J Edenberg1,19, Arpana Agrawal5, Ryan Bogdan3, Bernice Porjesz4, Alison M Goate2, Tatiana Foroud1.
Abstract
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of alcohol dependence (AD) have reliably identified variation within alcohol metabolizing genes (eg, ADH1B) but have inconsistently located other signals, which may be partially attributable to symptom heterogeneity underlying the disorder. We conducted GWAS of DSM-IV AD (primary analysis), DSM-IV AD criterion count (secondary analysis), and individual dependence criteria (tertiary analysis) among 7418 (1121 families) European American (EA) individuals from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA). Trans-ancestral meta-analyses combined these results with data from 3175 (585 families) African-American (AA) individuals from COGA. In the EA GWAS, three loci were genome-wide significant: rs1229984 in ADH1B for AD criterion count (P = 4.16E-11) and Desire to cut drinking (P = 1.21E-11); rs188227250 (chromosome 8, Drinking more than intended, P = 6.72E-09); rs1912461 (chromosome 15, Time spent drinking, P = 1.77E-08). In the trans-ancestral meta-analysis, rs1229984 was associated with multiple phenotypes and two additional loci were genome-wide significant: rs61826952 (chromosome 1, DSM-IV AD, P = 8.42E-11); rs7597960 (chromosome 2, Time spent drinking, P = 1.22E-08). Associations with rs1229984 and rs18822750 were replicated in independent datasets. Polygenic risk scores derived from the EA GWAS of AD predicted AD in two EA datasets (P < .01; 0.61%-1.82% of variance). Identified novel variants (ie, rs1912461, rs61826952) were associated with differential central evoked theta power (loss - gain; P = .0037) and reward-related ventral striatum reactivity (P = .008), respectively. This study suggests that studying individual criteria may unveil new insights into the genetic etiology of AD liability.Entities:
Keywords: DSM-IV alcohol dependence criterion; DSM-IV criterion count; DSM-IV individual criteria; alcohol dependence; event-related theta oscillations; functional magnetic resonance imaging; genome-wide association study; item response analysis; meta-analysis; polygenic risk score
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31090166 PMCID: PMC6612573 DOI: 10.1111/gbb.12579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Brain Behav ISSN: 1601-183X Impact factor: 3.449