articleAmerican Journal of PsychiatryJun 3, 2008GREEN OA

Variants in Nicotinic Receptors and Risk for Nicotine Dependence

Washington University in St. Louis · Institute of Behavioral Sciences · +1 more institution

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Abstract

Objective

A recent study provisionally identified numerous genetic variants as risk factors for the transition from smoking to the development of nicotine dependence, including an amino acid change in the alpha5 nicotinic cholinergic receptor (CHRNA5). The purpose of this study was to replicate these findings in an independent data set and more thoroughly investigate the role of genetic variation in the cluster of physically linked nicotinic receptors, CHRNA5-CHRNA3-CHRNB4, and the risk of smoking. METHOD: Individuals from 219 European American families (N=2,284) were genotyped across this gene cluster to test the genetic association with smoking. The frequency of the amino acid variant (rs16969968) was studied in 995 individuals from diverse ethnic populations. In vitro studies were performed to directly test whether the amino acid variant in the CHRNA5 influences receptor function.

Results

A genetic variant marking an amino acid change showed association with the smoking phenotype (p=0.007). This variant is within a highly conserved region across nonhuman species, but its frequency varied across human populations (0% in African populations to 37% in European populations). Furthermore, functional studies demonstrated that the risk allele decreased response to a nicotine agonist. A second independent finding was seen at rs578776 (p=0.003), and the functional significance of this association remains unknown.

Citation impact

639
total citations
FWCI
23.02
Percentile
100%
References
45
Citations per year

Authors

33

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Nicotinic agonist
  • Nicotine
  • Genetics
  • Biology
  • Genetic variation
  • Genetic association
  • Allele
  • Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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Funding