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  • Genome-wide Association Stu...
    Gelernter, Joel; Sun, Ning; Polimanti, Renato; Pietrzak, Robert H.; Levey, Daniel F.; Lu, Qiongshi; Hu, Yiming; Li, Boyang; Radhakrishnan, Krishnan; Aslan, Mihaela; Cheung, Kei-Hoi; Li, Yuli; Rajeevan, Nallakkandi; Sayward, Fred; Harrington, Kelly; Chen, Quan; Cho, Kelly; Honerlaw, Jacqueline; Pyarajan, Saiju; Lencz, Todd; Quaden, Rachel; Shi, Yunling; Hunter-Zinck, Haley; Gaziano, J. Michael; Kranzler, Henry R.; Concato, John; Zhao, Hongyu; Stein, Murray B.

    Biological psychiatry (1969), 09/2019, Volume: 86, Issue: 5
    Journal Article

    Habitual alcohol use can be an indicator of alcohol dependence, which is associated with a wide range of serious health problems. We completed a genome-wide association study in 126,936 European American and 17,029 African American subjects in the Veterans Affairs Million Veteran Program for a quantitative phenotype based on maximum habitual alcohol consumption. ADH1B, on chromosome 4, was the lead locus for both populations: for the European American sample, rs1229984 (p = 4.9 × 10−47); for African American, rs2066702 (p = 2.3 × 10−12). In the European American sample, we identified three additional genome-wide–significant maximum habitual alcohol consumption loci: on chromosome 17, rs77804065 (p = 1.5 × 10−12), at CRHR1 (corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1); the protein product of this gene is involved in stress and immune responses; and on chromosomes 8 and 10. European American and African American samples were then meta-analyzed; the associated region at CRHR1 increased in significance to 1.02 × 10−13, and we identified two additional genome-wide significant loci, FGF14 (p = 9.86 × 10−9) (chromosome 13) and a locus on chromosome 11. Besides ADH1B, none of the five loci have prior genome-wide significant support. Post–genome-wide association study analysis identified genetic correlation to other alcohol-related traits, smoking-related traits, and many others. Replications were observed in UK Biobank data. Genetic correlation between maximum habitual alcohol consumption and alcohol dependence was 0.87 (p = 4.78 × 10−9). Enrichment for cell types included dopaminergic and gamma-aminobutyric acidergic neurons in midbrain, and pancreatic delta cells. The present study supports five novel alcohol-use risk loci, with particularly strong statistical support for CRHR1. Additionally, we provide novel insight regarding the biology of harmful alcohol use.