TY - JOUR
T1 - Variations in GABRA2, Encoding the α2 Subunit of the GABA A Receptor, Are Associated with Alcohol Dependence and with Brain Oscillations
AU - Edenberg, Howard J.
AU - Dick, Danielle M.
AU - Xuei, Xiaoling
AU - Tian, Huijun
AU - Almasy, Laura
AU - Bauer, Lance O.
AU - Crowe, Raymond R.
AU - Goate, Alison
AU - Hesselbrock, Victor
AU - Jones, Kevin
AU - Kwon, Jennifer
AU - Li, Ting Kai
AU - Nurnberger, John I.
AU - O'Connor, Sean J.
AU - Reich, Theodore
AU - Rice, John
AU - Schuckit, Marc A.
AU - Porjesz, Bernice
AU - Foroud, Tatiana
AU - Begleiter, Henri
N1 - Funding Information:
The COGA (H. Begleiter, State University of New York Health Sciences Center, Brooklyn, principal investigator; T. Reich, Washington University, co–principal investigator; and H. Edenberg, Indiana University, co–principal investigator) includes nine different centers where data collection, analysis, and storage take place. The nine sites and principal investigators and coinvestigators are: Howard University (R. Taylor), Indiana University (H. Edenberg, J. Nurnberger, Jr., P. M. Conneally, and T. Foroud), Rutgers University (J. Tischfield), Southwest Foundation (L. Almasy), State University of New York Health Sciences Center at Brooklyn (B. Porjesz and H. Begleiter), University of California at San Diego (M. Schuckit), University of Connecticut (V. Hesselbrock), University of Iowa (R. Crowe and S. Kuperman), and Washington University in St. Louis (T. Reich, C. R. Cloninger, J. Rice, and A. Goate). Lisa Neuhold serves as the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) staff collaborator. This national collaborative study is supported by the National Institutes of Health grant U10AA08403 from the NIAAA. Genotyping facilities were provided by the Center for Medical Genomics at Indiana University School of Medicine, supported, in part, by the Indiana 21st Century Research and Technology Fund and the Indiana Genomics Initiative (INGEN, supported in part by the Lilly Endowment).
PY - 2004/4
Y1 - 2004/4
N2 - Alcoholism is a complex disease with both genetic and environmental risk factors. To identify genes that affect the risk for alcoholism, we systematically ascertained and carefully assessed individuals in families with multiple alcoholics. Linkage and association analyses suggested that a region of chromosome 4p contained genes affecting a quantitative endophenotype, brain oscillations in the beta frequency range (13-28 Hz), and the risk for alcoholism. To identify the individual genes that affect these phenotypes, we performed linkage disequilibrium analyses of 69 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNPs) within a cluster of four GABAA receptor genes, GABRG1, GABRA2, GABRA4, and GABRB1, at the center of the linked region. GABAA receptors mediate important effects of alcohol and also modulate beta frequencies. Thirty-one SNPs in GABRA2, but only 1 of the 20 SNPs in the flanking genes, showed significant association with alcoholism. Twenty-five of the GABRA2 SNPs, but only one of the SNPs in the flanking genes, were associated with the brain oscillations in the beta frequency. The region of strongest association with alcohol dependence extended from intron 3 past the 3′ end of GABRA2; all 43 of the consecutive three-SNP haplotypes in this region of GABRA2 were highly significant. A three-SNP haplotype was associated with alcoholism, with P = .000000022. No coding differences were found between the high-risk and low-risk haplotypes, suggesting that the effect is mediated through gene regulation. The very strong association of GABRA2 with both alcohol dependence and the beta frequency of the electroencephalogram, combined with biological evidence for a role of this gene in both phenotypes, suggest that GABRA2 might influence susceptibility to alcohol dependence by modulating the level of neural excitation.
AB - Alcoholism is a complex disease with both genetic and environmental risk factors. To identify genes that affect the risk for alcoholism, we systematically ascertained and carefully assessed individuals in families with multiple alcoholics. Linkage and association analyses suggested that a region of chromosome 4p contained genes affecting a quantitative endophenotype, brain oscillations in the beta frequency range (13-28 Hz), and the risk for alcoholism. To identify the individual genes that affect these phenotypes, we performed linkage disequilibrium analyses of 69 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNPs) within a cluster of four GABAA receptor genes, GABRG1, GABRA2, GABRA4, and GABRB1, at the center of the linked region. GABAA receptors mediate important effects of alcohol and also modulate beta frequencies. Thirty-one SNPs in GABRA2, but only 1 of the 20 SNPs in the flanking genes, showed significant association with alcoholism. Twenty-five of the GABRA2 SNPs, but only one of the SNPs in the flanking genes, were associated with the brain oscillations in the beta frequency. The region of strongest association with alcohol dependence extended from intron 3 past the 3′ end of GABRA2; all 43 of the consecutive three-SNP haplotypes in this region of GABRA2 were highly significant. A three-SNP haplotype was associated with alcoholism, with P = .000000022. No coding differences were found between the high-risk and low-risk haplotypes, suggesting that the effect is mediated through gene regulation. The very strong association of GABRA2 with both alcohol dependence and the beta frequency of the electroencephalogram, combined with biological evidence for a role of this gene in both phenotypes, suggest that GABRA2 might influence susceptibility to alcohol dependence by modulating the level of neural excitation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=12144288685&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1086/383283
DO - 10.1086/383283
M3 - Article
C2 - 15024690
AN - SCOPUS:12144288685
SN - 0002-9297
VL - 74
SP - 705
EP - 714
JO - American journal of human genetics
JF - American journal of human genetics
IS - 4
ER -