Abstract

Alcohol-related behaviors are moderately heritable and have ethnic-specific characteristics. At present, genetic studies for alcohol dependence (AD) in Chinese populations are underrepresented. We are the first to conduct a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for AD using 533 male alcoholics and 2848 controls of Han Chinese ethnicity and replicate our findings in 146 male alcoholics and 200 male controls. We then assessed genetic effects on AD characteristics (drinking volume/age onset/Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (MAST)/Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS-11)), and compared the polygenic risk of AD in Han Chinese with other populations (Thai, European American and African American). We found and validated two significant loci, one located in 4q23, with lead SNP rs2075633*ADH1B (Pdiscovery = 6.64 × 10−16) and functional SNP rs1229984*ADH1B (Pdiscovery = 3.93 × 10−13); and the other located in 12q24.12-12q24.13, with lead SNP rs11066001*BRAP (Pdiscovery = 1.63 × 10−9) and functional SNP rs671*ALDH2 (Pdiscovery = 3.44 × 10−9). ADH1B rs1229984 was associated with MAST, BIS_total score and average drinking volume. Polygenic risk scores from the Thai AD and European American AD GWAS were significantly associated with AD in Han Chinese, which were entirely due to the top two loci, however there was no significant prediction from African Americans. This is the first case-control AD GWAS in Han Chinese. Our findings demonstrate that these variants, which were highly linked with ALDH2 rs671 and ADH1B rs1229984, were significant modulators for AD in our Han Chinese cohort. A larger replication cohort is still needed to validate our findings.

Highlights

  • Alcohol dependence (AD) is a common medical and social issue

  • Our findings demonstrate that these variants, which were highly linked with ALDH2 rs[671] and ADH1B rs1229984, were significant modulators for AD in our Han Chinese cohort

  • The well-known nonsynonymous SNP rs1229984, which leads to an amino acid change (ADH1B: H48R, ADH1B: H8R) and is known to be functional based on biochemistry studies, was present in this locus (P = 3.93 × 10−13)[37]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Alcohol dependence (AD) is a common medical and social issue. The harmful effects of alcohol include chronic disease and injury and is a serious and growing problem worldwide[1]. China has a different demographic profile and a environmental variables such as patterns of alcohol consumption can influence the development and severity of AD, twin and family-based studies have consistently demonstrated that the heritability of AD is ~50%3. Identifying genetic risk factors for AD could extend our understanding of the biological mechanisms and would be helpful for individualized prevention and control of alcohol-related diseases. The genetic susceptibility to alcohol dependence has been widely explored using genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and candidate-gene studies across different populations[4,5,6]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call