TY - JOUR
T1 - A phenome-wide association and Mendelian randomisation study of alcohol use variants in a diverse cohort comprising over 3 million individuals
AU - 23andMe, Inc. Research Team
AU - Jennings, Mariela V.
AU - Martínez-Magaña, José Jaime
AU - Courchesne-Krak, Natasia S.
AU - Cupertino, Renata B.
AU - Vilar-Ribó, Laura
AU - Bianchi, Sevim B.
AU - Hatoum, Alexander S.
AU - Atkinson, Elizabeth G.
AU - Giusti-Rodriguez, Paola
AU - Montalvo-Ortiz, Janitza L.
AU - Gelernter, Joel
AU - Artigas, María Soler
AU - Aslibekyan, Stella
AU - Auton, Adam
AU - Babalola, Elizabeth
AU - Bell, Robert K.
AU - Bielenberg, Jessica
AU - Bryc, Katarzyna
AU - Bullis, Emily
AU - Coker, Daniella
AU - Partida, Gabriel Cuellar
AU - Dhamija, Devika
AU - Das, Sayantan
AU - Elson, Sarah L.
AU - Eriksson, Nicholas
AU - Filshtein, Teresa
AU - Fitch, Alison
AU - Fletez-Brant, Kipper
AU - Fontanillas, Pierre
AU - Freyman, Will
AU - Granka, Julie M.
AU - Heilbron, Karl
AU - Hernandez, Alejandro
AU - Hicks, Barry
AU - Hinds, David A.
AU - Jewett, Ethan M.
AU - Jiang, Yunxuan
AU - Kukar, Katelyn
AU - Kwong, Alan
AU - Lin, Keng Han
AU - Llamas, Bianca A.
AU - Lowe, Maya
AU - McCreight, Jey C.
AU - McIntyre, Matthew H.
AU - Micheletti, Steven J.
AU - Moreno, Meghan E.
AU - Nandakumar, Priyanka
AU - Nguyen, Dominique T.
AU - Noblin, Elizabeth S.
AU - O'Connell, Jared
AU - Petrakovitz, Aaron A.
AU - Poznik, G. David
AU - Reynoso, Alexandra
AU - Schumacher, Morgan
AU - Shastri, Anjali J.
AU - Shelton, Janie F.
AU - Shi, Jingchunzi
AU - Shringarpure, Suyash
AU - Su, Qiaojuan Jane
AU - Tat, Susana A.
AU - Tchakouté, Christophe Toukam
AU - Tran, Vinh
AU - Tung, Joyce Y.
AU - Wang, Xin
AU - Wang, Wei
AU - Weldon, Catherine H.
AU - Wilton, Peter
AU - Wong, Corinna D.
AU - Edenberg, Howard J.
AU - Palmer, Abraham A.
AU - Sanchez-Roige, Sandra
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/5
Y1 - 2024/5
N2 - Background: Alcohol consumption is associated with numerous negative social and health outcomes. These associations may be direct consequences of drinking, or they may reflect common genetic factors that influence both alcohol consumption and other outcomes. Methods: We performed exploratory phenome-wide association studies (PheWAS) of three of the best studied protective single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in genes encoding ethanol metabolising enzymes (ADH1B: rs1229984-T, rs2066702-A; ADH1C: rs698-T) using up to 1109 health outcomes across 28 phenotypic categories (e.g., substance-use, mental health, sleep, immune, cardiovascular, metabolic) from a diverse 23andMe cohort, including European (N ≤ 2,619,939), Latin American (N ≤ 446,646) and African American (N ≤ 146,776) populations to uncover new and perhaps unexpected associations. These SNPs have been consistently implicated by both candidate gene studies and genome-wide association studies of alcohol-related behaviours but have not been investigated in detail for other relevant phenotypes in a hypothesis-free approach in such a large cohort of multiple ancestries. To provide insight into potential causal effects of alcohol consumption on the outcomes significant in the PheWAS, we performed univariable two-sample and one-sample Mendelian randomisation (MR) analyses. Findings: The minor allele rs1229984-T, which is protective against alcohol behaviours, showed the highest number of PheWAS associations across the three cohorts (N = 232, European; N = 29, Latin American; N = 7, African American). rs1229984-T influenced multiple domains of health. We replicated associations with alcohol-related behaviours, mental and sleep conditions, and cardio-metabolic health. We also found associations with understudied traits related to neurological (migraines, epilepsy), immune (allergies), musculoskeletal (fibromyalgia), and reproductive health (preeclampsia). MR analyses identified evidence of causal effects of alcohol consumption on liability for 35 of these outcomes in the European cohort. Interpretation: Our work demonstrates that polymorphisms in genes encoding alcohol metabolising enzymes affect multiple domains of health beyond alcohol-related behaviours. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of these effects could have implications for treatments and preventative medicine. Funding: MVJ, NCK, SBB, SSR and AAP were supported by T32IR5226 and 28IR-0070. SSR was also supported by NIDA DP1DA054394. NCK and RBC were also supported by R25MH081482. ASH was supported by funds from NIAAA K01AA030083. JLMO was supported by VA 1IK2CX002095. JLMO and JJMM were also supported by NIDA R21DA050160. JJMM was also supported by the Kavli Postdoctoral Award for Academic Diversity. EGA was supported by K01MH121659 from the NIMH/NIH, the Caroline Wiess Law Fund for Research in Molecular Medicine and the ARCO Foundation Young Teacher-Investigator Fund at Baylor College of Medicine. MSA was supported by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III and co-funded by the European Union Found: Fondo Social Europeo Plus (FSE+) (P19/01224, PI22/00464 and CP22/00128).
AB - Background: Alcohol consumption is associated with numerous negative social and health outcomes. These associations may be direct consequences of drinking, or they may reflect common genetic factors that influence both alcohol consumption and other outcomes. Methods: We performed exploratory phenome-wide association studies (PheWAS) of three of the best studied protective single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in genes encoding ethanol metabolising enzymes (ADH1B: rs1229984-T, rs2066702-A; ADH1C: rs698-T) using up to 1109 health outcomes across 28 phenotypic categories (e.g., substance-use, mental health, sleep, immune, cardiovascular, metabolic) from a diverse 23andMe cohort, including European (N ≤ 2,619,939), Latin American (N ≤ 446,646) and African American (N ≤ 146,776) populations to uncover new and perhaps unexpected associations. These SNPs have been consistently implicated by both candidate gene studies and genome-wide association studies of alcohol-related behaviours but have not been investigated in detail for other relevant phenotypes in a hypothesis-free approach in such a large cohort of multiple ancestries. To provide insight into potential causal effects of alcohol consumption on the outcomes significant in the PheWAS, we performed univariable two-sample and one-sample Mendelian randomisation (MR) analyses. Findings: The minor allele rs1229984-T, which is protective against alcohol behaviours, showed the highest number of PheWAS associations across the three cohorts (N = 232, European; N = 29, Latin American; N = 7, African American). rs1229984-T influenced multiple domains of health. We replicated associations with alcohol-related behaviours, mental and sleep conditions, and cardio-metabolic health. We also found associations with understudied traits related to neurological (migraines, epilepsy), immune (allergies), musculoskeletal (fibromyalgia), and reproductive health (preeclampsia). MR analyses identified evidence of causal effects of alcohol consumption on liability for 35 of these outcomes in the European cohort. Interpretation: Our work demonstrates that polymorphisms in genes encoding alcohol metabolising enzymes affect multiple domains of health beyond alcohol-related behaviours. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of these effects could have implications for treatments and preventative medicine. Funding: MVJ, NCK, SBB, SSR and AAP were supported by T32IR5226 and 28IR-0070. SSR was also supported by NIDA DP1DA054394. NCK and RBC were also supported by R25MH081482. ASH was supported by funds from NIAAA K01AA030083. JLMO was supported by VA 1IK2CX002095. JLMO and JJMM were also supported by NIDA R21DA050160. JJMM was also supported by the Kavli Postdoctoral Award for Academic Diversity. EGA was supported by K01MH121659 from the NIMH/NIH, the Caroline Wiess Law Fund for Research in Molecular Medicine and the ARCO Foundation Young Teacher-Investigator Fund at Baylor College of Medicine. MSA was supported by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III and co-funded by the European Union Found: Fondo Social Europeo Plus (FSE+) (P19/01224, PI22/00464 and CP22/00128).
KW - ADH1B
KW - ADH1C
KW - Alcohol
KW - Metabolising enzyme genes
KW - PheWAS
KW - rs1229984
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85189667263
U2 - 10.1016/j.ebiom.2024.105086
DO - 10.1016/j.ebiom.2024.105086
M3 - Article
C2 - 38580523
AN - SCOPUS:85189667263
SN - 2352-3964
VL - 103
JO - EBioMedicine
JF - EBioMedicine
M1 - 105086
ER -