학술논문

Association of the OPRM1 Variant rs1799971 (A118G) with Non-Specific Liability to Substance Dependence in a Collaborative de novo Meta-Analysis of European-Ancestry Cohorts
Document Type
article
Author
Schwantes-An, Tae-HwiZhang, JuanChen, Li-ShiunHartz, Sarah MCulverhouse, Robert CChen, XiangningCoon, HilaryFrank, JosefKamens, Helen MKonte, BettinaKovanen, LeenaLatvala, AnttiLegrand, Lisa NMaher, Brion SMelroy, Whitney ENelson, Elliot CReid, Mark WRobinson, Jason DShen, Pei-HongYang, Bao-ZhuAndrews, Judy AAveyard, PaulBeltcheva, OlgaBrown, Sandra ACannon, Dale SCichon, SvenCorley, Robin PDahmen, NorbertDegenhardt, LouisaForoud, TatianaGaebel, WolfgangGiegling, InaGlatt, Stephen JGrucza, Richard AHardin, JillHartmann, Annette MHeath, Andrew CHerms, StefanHodgkinson, Colin AHoffmann, PerHops, HymanHuizinga, DavidIsing, MarcusJohnson, Eric OJohnstone, ElaineKaneva, Radka PKendler, Kenneth SKiefer, FalkKranzler, Henry RKrauter, Ken SLevran, OrnaLucae, SusanneLynskey, Michael TMaier, WolfgangMann, KarlMartin, Nicholas GMattheisen, ManuelMontgomery, Grant WMüller-Myhsok, BertramMurphy, Michael FNeale, Michael CNikolov, Momchil ANishita, DeniseNöthen, Markus MNurnberger, JohnPartonen, TimoPergadia, Michele LReynolds, MaureenRidinger, MonikaRose, Richard JRouvinen-Lagerström, NooraScherbaum, NorbertSchmäl, ChristineSoyka, MichaelStallings, Michael CSteffens, MichaelTreutlein, JensTsuang, MingWall, Tamara LWodarz, NorbertYuferov, VadimZill, PeterBergen, Andrew WChen, JingchunCinciripini, Paul MEdenberg, Howard JEhringer, Marissa AFerrell, Robert EGelernter, JoelGoldman, DavidHewitt, John KHopfer, Christian JIacono, William GKaprio, JaakkoKreek, Mary JeanneKremensky, Ivo MMadden, Pamela AFMcGue, MattMunafò, Marcus RPhilibert, Robert A
Source
Behavior Genetics. 46(2)
Subject
Biological Psychology
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Psychology
Tobacco
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Brain Disorders
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Substance Misuse
Genetics
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Adult
Alleles
Case-Control Studies
Child
Cohort Studies
Gene Frequency
Genetic Association Studies
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Humans
Male
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Receptors
Opioid
mu
Sample Size
Substance-Related Disorders
White People
Addiction
Substance dependence
OPRM1
Opioid receptor
Single nucleotide polymorphism
Genetic association
Zoology
Neurosciences
Genetics & Heredity
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
The mu1 opioid receptor gene, OPRM1, has long been a high-priority candidate for human genetic studies of addiction. Because of its potential functional significance, the non-synonymous variant rs1799971 (A118G, Asn40Asp) in OPRM1 has been extensively studied, yet its role in addiction has remained unclear, with conflicting association findings. To resolve the question of what effect, if any, rs1799971 has on substance dependence risk, we conducted collaborative meta-analyses of 25 datasets with over 28,000 European-ancestry subjects. We investigated non-specific risk for "general" substance dependence, comparing cases dependent on any substance to controls who were non-dependent on all assessed substances. We also examined five specific substance dependence diagnoses: DSM-IV alcohol, opioid, cannabis, and cocaine dependence, and nicotine dependence defined by the proxy of heavy/light smoking (cigarettes-per-day >20 vs. ≤ 10). The G allele showed a modest protective effect on general substance dependence (OR = 0.90, 95% C.I. [0.83-0.97], p value = 0.0095, N = 16,908). We observed similar effects for each individual substance, although these were not statistically significant, likely because of reduced sample sizes. We conclude that rs1799971 contributes to mechanisms of addiction liability that are shared across different addictive substances. This project highlights the benefits of examining addictive behaviors collectively and the power of collaborative data sharing and meta-analyses.