Genome-wide meta-analysis reveals common splice site acceptor variant in CHRNA4 associated with nicotine dependence

D. B. Hancock*, G. W. Reginsson, N. C. Gaddis, X. Chen, N. L. Saccone, S. M. Lutz, B. Qaiser, R. Sherva, S. Steinberg, F. Zink, S. N. Stacey, C. Glasheen, J. Chen, F. Gu, B. N. Frederiksen, A. Loukola, D. F. Gudbjartsson, I. Brüske, M. T. Landi, H. BickeböllerP. Madden, L. Farrer, J. Kaprio, H. R. Kranzler, J. Gelernter, T. B. Baker, P. Kraft, C. I. Amos, N. E. Caporaso, J. E. Hokanson, L. J. Bierut, T. E. Thorgeirsson, E. O. Johnson, K. Stefansson

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

59 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We conducted a 1000 Genomes-imputed genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis for nicotine dependence, defined by the Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence in 17 074 ever smokers from five European-ancestry samples. We followed up novel variants in 7469 ever smokers from five independent European-ancestry samples. We identified genome-wide significant association in the alpha-4 nicotinic receptor subunit (CHRNA4) gene on chromosome 20q13: lowest P=8.0 × 10 -9 across all the samples for rs2273500-C (frequency=0.15; odds ratio=1.12 and 95% confidence interval=1.08-1.17 for severe vs mild dependence). rs2273500-C, a splice site acceptor variant resulting in an alternate CHRNA4 transcript predicted to be targeted for nonsense-mediated decay, was associated with decreased CHRNA4 expression in physiologically normal human brains (lowest P=7.3 × 10 -4). Importantly, rs2273500-C was associated with increased lung cancer risk (N=28 998, odds ratio=1.06 and 95% confidence interval=1.00-1.12), likely through its effect on smoking, as rs2273500-C was no longer associated with lung cancer after adjustment for smoking. Using criteria for smoking behavior that encompass more than the single 'cigarettes per day' item, we identified a common CHRNA4 variant with important regulatory properties that contributes to nicotine dependence and smoking-related consequences.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere651
JournalTranslational Psychiatry
Volume5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Oct 2015

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