In the News
As reported by the Science Daily, September 27, 2007.
Gene That May Influence Alcoholism And
Addiction Identified
Previous research has extensively studied the association of the
dopamine D2 receptor gene (DRD2) with alcoholism. Findings, however,
have been inconsistent. A new study suggests that a neighboring gene
called ankyrin repeat and kinase domain containing 1 (ANKK1) may
also be involved in addictive behaviors.
"Previous inconsistencies could be due to a variety of sources,
including differences in the symptom profiles of alcoholics who have
participated in various studies, and/or methodological limitations
of previous studies," explained Danielle Dick, corresponding author
for the study.
"If individuals are not carefully matched, and/or differ on other
characteristics such as ethnicity, then the gene frequency could
differ because of those factors rather than as a function of disease
status. Another limitation of previous studies is that they have
largely focused on a single genetic marker in the DRD2 gene, which
we now know is actually in the neighboring ANKK1 gene." Now at
Virginia Commonwealth University, Dick was an assistant professor at
Washington University, St. Louis when this study was conducted.
Dick said that this study addressed several of these previous
limitations, providing a step forward in the research on genetic
influences on addictions. Research, commented Brien Riley, director
of the molecular genetics lab at Virginia Commonwealth University,
that nonetheless remains unclear despite huge advances in
understanding the genetic makeup of humans.
"Previous evidence indicates that genes play a major role in
liability to addictions, including alcoholism," said Riley. "Yet
genes are certainly not sufficient to produce disease by themselves.
The individual must be exposed to alcohol, which, in common with any
chemical encountered in the world, is explicitly environmental. When
you consider that addictions also involve that incredibly complex
and unpredictable thing that is human behavior, then the real
complexity of the problem is clear."
Riley explained that genetic research can often be guided by
additional non-genetic information. "We know that certain regions of
the brain are particularly important in processing reward," he said.
"Neurons which use dopamine as their neurotransmitter connect these
regions, and some research suggests that there may be dopamine
imbalances in these regions among alcoholics. Although these
differences might be the result of chronic heavy drinking rather
than its cause ... variation in genes coding for the various
proteins that mediate dopamine neurotransmission might also be
involved in alcoholism. The DRD2 gene, which codes for one of the
five dopamine receptors, has been heavily studied for possible links
to alcoholism, but with mixed results. Hence the current study."
Using data collected as part of the Collaborative Study on the
Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA), a long-term project with multiple
sites across the United States, researchers genotyped 26
single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) spanning DRD2 and ANKK1 in a
sample of 219 Caucasian families (n=1923).
"The key finding here is that when you genotype markers not just
in DRD2, the highly studied gene in this region, but also genotype
markers across surrounding genes, there is evidence that surrounding
genes, such as ANKK1, may also be involved in addiction phenotypes,"
said Dick. "If there are indeed multiple genes in the region
involved, it may help explain the inconsistency surrounding whether
DRD2 plays a role."
Riley concurs. "The study finds strongest evidence of association
not in the DRD2 gene, but rather in the neighboring gene, ANKK1," he
said. "This is notable because it suggests that the original
evidence pointed to ANKK1 all along and it was the error in mapping
the variant that supported the involvement of DRD2. However, the
evidence in this paper is by no means conclusive that ANKK1 is
involved in alcoholism, any more than the older evidence was that
DRD2 was involved, and it must be interpreted with caution and
further explored."
Which is the plan. Dick and her COGA colleagues will continue to
pursue the identification of additional genes involved in genetic
susceptibility to alcoholism, across this and several other
chromosomal regions.
Results are published in the October issue of Alcoholism:
Clinical & Experimental Research.
Co-authors of the ACER paper, "Family-Based Association Analyses
of Alcohol Dependence Phenotypes across DRD2 and Neighboring Gene
ANKK1," were: Jen C. Wang, Jevon Plunkett, Fazil Aliev, Anthony
Hinrichs, Sarah Bertelsen, John P. Budde, Elianna L. Goldstein,
Daniel Kaplan, Laura Jean Bierut, and Alison Goate of Washington
University in St. Louis; Howard J. Edenberg and John Nurnberger, Jr.
of Indiana University School of Medicine; Victor Hesselbrock of the
University of Connecticut Health Center; Marc Schuckit of the
University of California, San Diego as well as the VA Medical
Center, San Diego; Sam Kuperman of the University of Iowa College of
Medicine; Jay Tischfield of Rutgers University; and Bernice Porjesz
and Henri Begleiter, now deceased, of SUNY Health Science Center at
Brooklyn. The study was funded by the National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research. |