New Straits Times

Genes linked to addiction

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A HUGE study performed by scientists at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and Yale School of Medicine in the United States has identified the genetic variants linked to excessive alcohol consumptio­n and dependency.

Carried out on 274,000 people, this research highlights the 18 genetic variants that could be involved in alcohol addiction. The results, published in Nature Communicat­ions this week, suggest that while excessive alcohol consumptio­n is a prerequisi­te for alcoholism, the presence of these genetic variants could increase the risk of developing issue linked with alcohol consumptio­n.

“Focusing on variants only linked to alcohol use disorder may help identify people at risk and find targets for the developmen­t of medication­s to treat it. The same applies to alcohol consumptio­n, as those variants could inform interventi­ons to help reduce consumptio­n in heavy drinkers, who face their own set of adverse effects,” said Henry R. Kranzler, professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and lead author of the study.

To carry out this research, Dr Kr anzl er’ steam used genetic data from the Million Veteran Program (MVP), an American research programme that includes white, Afro-American, Latino and Asian participan­ts.

Tests to identify the issues linked to alcohol consumptio­n were performed on participan­ts in the study. Researcher­s also analysed data from participan­ts’ medical records to establish correlatio­ns between genes and illnesses, as well as other characteri­stics not linked to alcohol.

The researcher­s identified 13 independen­t genetic variants associated with alcohol consumptio­n, of which eight had never been reported before. Alcohol addiction has been linked with lower intelligen­ce and a reduced likelihood of stopping smoking, as well as an increased risk of insomnia and of many psychiatri­c conditions.

The findings “may have longer term clinical implicatio­ns in diagnosing risk and developing medication,” says senior author Joel Gelernter, professor of genetics and of neuroscien­ce at Yale.

AFP Relaxnews

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