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GWAS Study

The Interplay Between Risky Sexual Behaviors and Alcohol Dependence: Genome-Wide Association and Neuroimaging Support for LHPP as a Risk Gene.

Polimanti R, Wang Q, Meda SA et al.

27531626 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
3924 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

PR
Polimanti R
WQ
Wang Q
MS
Meda SA
PK
Patel KT
PG
Pearlson GD
ZH
Zhao H
FL
Farrer LA
KH
Kranzler HR
GJ
Gelernter J
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

To identify genetic mechanisms involved in the interplay of risky sexual behaviors (RSBs) and alcohol dependence (AD), we conducted genome-wide gene-by-AD (GW-GxAD) analyses of RSB in 3924 alcohol-exposed and sexually experienced subjects. RSBs were defined as a score based on lifetime experiences of unprotected sex and multiple sexual partners. Diagnosis of lifetime AD was defined by DSM-IV criteria. To follow-up the genetic findings, functional magnetic resonance imaging analyses were conducted in an independent sample. A trans-population genome-wide significant signal was identified in LHPP (rs34997829; z=-5.573, p=2.51 × 10-8) in the GxAD analysis that also showed associations in the AD-stratified association analysis (AD z=-2.032 and non-AD z=4.903). The clinical relevance of the result was confirmed by the significant interaction between LHPP rs34997829 and AD with respect to self-reported sexually transmitted disease (STD; z=-2.809, p=4.97 × 10-3). The neuroimaging follow-up analysis of LHPP rs34997829 showed reduced power of the left superior frontal gyrus (t=-3.386, p=9.56 × 10-4) and increased power at the right amygdala (t=3.287, p=1.33 × 10-3) in the resting amplitude of low frequency fluctuations analysis; and reduced activation of the anterior cingulate region (t=-2.961, p=3.69 × 10-3) in the monetary incentive delay task. In conclusion, LHPP locus is associated to AD-RSB interaction; and with brain circuitries previously implicated in the inhibition of risky behavior and impulsiveness, emotional regulation, and impulse control/error monitoring. Thus, LHPP is a strong candidate to influence RSB and STD risk in the context of AD.

1,541 African American alcohol dependent cases, 1,436 European American alcohol dependent cases, 632 African American non-alcohol dependent controls, 315 European American non-alcohol dependent controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

3924
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European, African American or Afro-Caribbean
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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