| Literature DB >> 32652861 |
Dongbing Lai1, Manav Kapoor2, Leah Wetherill1, Melanie Schwandt3, Vijay A Ramchandani4, David Goldman3, Michael Chao2, Laura Almasy5, Kathleen Bucholz6, Ronald P Hart7, Chella Kamarajan8, Jacquelyn L Meyers8, John I Nurnberger1,9, Jay Tischfield10, Howard J Edenberg1,11, Marc Schuckit12, Alison Goate2, Denise M Scott13, Bernice Porjesz8, Arpana Agrawal6, Tatiana Foroud1.
Abstract
African Americans (AA) have lower prevalence of alcohol dependence and higher subjective response to alcohol than European Americans. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified genes/variants associated with alcohol dependence specifically in AA; however, the sample sizes are still not large enough to detect variants with small effects. Admixture mapping is an alternative way to identify alcohol dependence genes/variants that may be unique to AA. In this study, we performed the first admixture mapping of DSM-IV alcohol dependence diagnosis, DSM-IV alcohol dependence criterion count, and two scores from the self-rating of effects of ethanol (SRE) as measures of response to alcohol: the first five times of using alcohol (SRE-5) and average of SRE across three times (SRE-T). Findings revealed a region on chromosome 4 that was genome-wide significant for SRE-5 (p value = 4.18E-05). Fine mapping did not identify a single causal variant to be associated with SRE-5; instead, conditional analysis concluded that multiple variants collectively explained the admixture mapping signal. PPARGC1A, a gene that has been linked to alcohol consumption in previous studies, is located in this region. Our finding suggests that admixture mapping is a useful tool to identify genes/variants that may have been missed by current GWAS approaches in admixed populations.Entities:
Keywords: African American; DSM-IV alcohol dependence; admixture mapping; criterion count; response to ethanol
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32652861 PMCID: PMC9376735 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.b.32805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet ISSN: 1552-4841 Impact factor: 3.358