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Exome Chip Meta-analysis Fine Maps Causal Variants and Elucidates the Genetic Architecture of Rare Coding Variants in Smoking and Alcohol Use.

Authors :
Brazel DM
Jiang Y
Hughey JM
Turcot V
Zhan X
Gong J
Batini C
Weissenkampen JD
Liu M
Barnes DR
Bertelsen S
Chou YL
Erzurumluoglu AM
Faul JD
Haessler J
Hammerschlag AR
Hsu C
Kapoor M
Lai D
Le N
de Leeuw CA
Loukola A
Mangino M
Melbourne CA
Pistis G
Qaiser B
Rohde R
Shao Y
Stringham H
Wetherill L
Zhao W
Agrawal A
Bierut L
Chen C
Eaton CB
Goate A
Haiman C
Heath A
Iacono WG
Martin NG
Polderman TJ
Reiner A
Rice J
Schlessinger D
Scholte HS
Smith JA
Tardif JC
Tindle HA
van der Leij AR
Boehnke M
Chang-Claude J
Cucca F
David SP
Foroud T
Howson JMM
Kardia SLR
Kooperberg C
Laakso M
Lettre G
Madden P
McGue M
North K
Posthuma D
Spector T
Stram D
Tobin MD
Weir DR
Kaprio J
Abecasis GR
Liu DJ
Vrieze S
Source :
Biological psychiatry [Biol Psychiatry] 2019 Jun 01; Vol. 85 (11), pp. 946-955. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Dec 06.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background: Smoking and alcohol use have been associated with common genetic variants in multiple loci. Rare variants within these loci hold promise in the identification of biological mechanisms in substance use. Exome arrays and genotype imputation can now efficiently genotype rare nonsynonymous and loss of function variants. Such variants are expected to have deleterious functional consequences and to contribute to disease risk.<br />Methods: We analyzed ∼250,000 rare variants from 16 independent studies genotyped with exome arrays and augmented this dataset with imputed data from the UK Biobank. Associations were tested for five phenotypes: cigarettes per day, pack-years, smoking initiation, age of smoking initiation, and alcoholic drinks per week. We conducted stratified heritability analyses, single-variant tests, and gene-based burden tests of nonsynonymous/loss-of-function coding variants. We performed a novel fine-mapping analysis to winnow the number of putative causal variants within associated loci.<br />Results: Meta-analytic sample sizes ranged from 152,348 to 433,216, depending on the phenotype. Rare coding variation explained 1.1% to 2.2% of phenotypic variance, reflecting 11% to 18% of the total single nucleotide polymorphism heritability of these phenotypes. We identified 171 genome-wide associated loci across all phenotypes. Fine mapping identified putative causal variants with double base-pair resolution at 24 of these loci, and between three and 10 variants for 65 loci. Twenty loci contained rare coding variants in the 95% credible intervals.<br />Conclusions: Rare coding variation significantly contributes to the heritability of smoking and alcohol use. Fine-mapping genome-wide association study loci identifies specific variants contributing to the biological etiology of substance use behavior.<br /> (Copyright © 2018 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1873-2402
Volume :
85
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biological psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30679032
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2018.11.024