Home Researchers find link between genetic variation and alcohol dependence
News

Researchers find link between genetic variation and alcohol dependence

Contributors

vcu-logoVirginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine researchers have discovered a biological clue that could help explain why some drinkers develop a dependence on alcohol and others do not.

The findings move researchers closer to identifying those at risk for addiction early and designing better drug treatments to help people stop drinking.

About 18 million people in the United States have an alcohol use disorder, according to National Instiutes of Health statistics. The vast majority go untreated.

“There are few and inadequate pharmacological treatments to help people who want to stop drinking, because this is a terrifically difficult human genetics problem,” said Jill C. Bettinger, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, VCU School of Medicine. “If we can better understand the molecular effects of alcohol, we can design more rational treatments and even warn people who are more susceptible to developing a dependence.”

Bettinger is the senior author of a paper, “SWI/SNF Chromatin Remodeling Regulates Alcohol Response Behaviors in Caenorhabditis Elegans and is Associated With Alcohol Dependence in Humans,” published Feb. 23 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The paper describes how researchers examined the role of a protein complex — called switching defective/sucrose nonfermenting (SWI/SNF) — in determining the behavioral response of roundworms to alcohol.

Researchers watched through microscopes as the tiny worms became drunk on ethanol, studying how their initial sensitivity to the alcohol and tolerance changed based on which genes were expressed within the SWI/SNF complex.

Because humans and worms have a similar genetic makeup, Bettinger then turned to Brien P. Riley, Ph.D., associate professor in the Departments of Psychiatry and Human and Molecular Genetics at VCU School of Medicine and co-author of the recently published paper. Riley is director of the Molecular Genetics Lab at the Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, where researchers have been studying the human genome and its relationship to the risk of illness or other traits.

Riley found that naturally occurring genetic variations in the same SWI/SNF complex so crucial to a worm’s tolerance were also associated with alcohol dependence in humans. Unlike Huntington’s and other diseases, which can be linked to a mutation in a single gene, the evidence suggests that the likelihood to develop alcoholism is the product of mutations in many genes, each with small effect. The SWI/SNF complex genes represent a piece of that puzzle.

The findings also give researchers a perfect model moving forward in their studies.

“The identification of genes that are critical in the development of tolerance in model systems such as worms will lead to future progress in understanding human dependence on alcohol,” Riley said. “If the same effects are seen in worms, then it allows us to form and test a functional hypothesis about what kinds of changes lead to increased dependence risk in humans.”

Along with Bettinger and Riley, the paper’s authors include Laura D. Mathies, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology; Andrew G. Davies, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology; GinaMari G. Blackwell, laboratory and research specialist; Makeda K. Austin, research intern; and Alexis C. Edwards, Ph.D., assistant professor at the Virginia Institute of Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics.

The research was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

Politics, U.S. & World

TV: AFP editor Chris Graham talks U.S. Senate passage of ICE funding bill on Fox5 DC

uva basketball ryan odom huddle
Basketball

UVA Basketball: Has Ryan Odom built himself a Top 10 team for next season?

This time last year, UVA Basketball coach Ryan Odom was introducing a bunch of strangers to each other, and trying to convince them, and everybody else, that they could get Virginia Basketball back to where it had been not that long ago. Heading into his second summer as the head coach, Odom is building on...

louise lucas abigail spanberger
Politics, Virginia

Louise Lucas to the ‘Data Center Diva’: No more tax breaks for data centers

Gov. Abigail Spanberger and House of Delegates Speaker Don Scott want the state and localities to continue to be able to offer massive tax breaks to data center developers.

melanie lucero congress
Politics, Virginia

Another contentious Republican primary in the Fifth District in the offing

us politics congress
Politics, U.S. & World

U.S. Senate votes to advance $70B immigration enforcement funding bill

baltimore orioles
Baseball

Baltimore Orioles quietly playing themselves back into playoff contention

joanna hardin uva softball
Etc.

UVA Softball: Coach Joanna Hardin signs three-year contract extension