自愿接触一种毒素:对乙醇消费的遗传影响。

Paula L Hoffman, Laura M Saba, Lauren A Vanderlinden, Boris Tabakoff
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引用次数: 8

摘要

酒精是一种毒素,当摄入过量时,会造成器官损伤和死亡。预防或改善人体这种损害的一种方法是通过减少酒精摄入来减少器官接触酒精。大量饮酒的倾向和人体器官对酒精引起的损伤的易感性都表现出强烈的遗传影响。我们已经开发了一种综合遗传/基因组方法来识别易导致复杂特征的转录网络,包括饮酒倾向和酒精诱导的器官损伤倾向。在我们的方法中,表型在一组重组自交系(RI)大鼠菌株中进行评估,并进行数量性状位点(QTL)分析。使用加权基因共表达网络分析(Weighted Gene Coexpression Network Analysis, WGCNA),利用naïve RI大鼠菌株的组织/器官转录组数据来鉴定转录网络。在大鼠菌株中,转录共表达模块的第一主成分与表型的相关性,以及表型QTL与共表达模块QTL的重叠(模块特征基因QTL)为鉴定导致表型的功能相关基因群(候选模块)提供了标准。虽然我们之前发现了一个脑转录模块,其QTL与HXB/BXH RI大鼠品系和12个选定的大鼠品系的酒精消耗水平的QTL重叠,但该模块并不能解释酒精消耗的所有遗传变异。然而,我们对QTL重叠和共表达模块与表型的相关性的研究可以应用于任何已经测量过转录组的器官,这代表了一种寻找复杂性状遗传因素的整体方法。先前的研究表明,肝脏与大脑的相互作用,特别是涉及炎症/免疫过程的相互作用,会影响饮酒水平。我们现在分析了HXB/BXH RI大鼠组的肝脏转录组与饮酒行为特征的关系。我们使用RNA-Seq和微阵列数据构建肝脏转录网络,并确定了肝脏候选转录共表达模块,该模块解释了24%的自愿饮酒遗传变异。本模块的转录本主要关注影响炎症和免疫信号通路的肝脏分泌产物。我们提出,这些肝脏分泌产物可以与影响酒精消耗的大脑机制相互作用,针对这些途径提供了一种潜在的方法,可以减少高水平的酒精摄入量,并保护肝脏和其他器官的完整性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Voluntary exposure to a toxin: the genetic influence on ethanol consumption.

Voluntary exposure to a toxin: the genetic influence on ethanol consumption.

Voluntary exposure to a toxin: the genetic influence on ethanol consumption.

Ethyl alcohol is a toxin that, when consumed at high levels, produces organ damage and death. One way to prevent or ameliorate this damage in humans is to reduce the exposure of organs to alcohol by reducing alcohol ingestion. Both the propensity to consume large volumes of alcohol and the susceptibility of human organs to alcohol-induced damage exhibit a strong genetic influence. We have developed an integrative genetic/genomic approach to identify transcriptional networks that predispose complex traits, including propensity for alcohol consumption and propensity for alcohol-induced organ damage. In our approach, the phenotype is assessed in a panel of recombinant inbred (RI) rat strains, and quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis is performed. Transcriptome data from tissues/organs of naïve RI rat strains are used to identify transcriptional networks using Weighted Gene Coexpression Network Analysis (WGCNA). Correlation of the first principal component of transcriptional coexpression modules with the phenotype across the rat strains, and overlap of QTLs for the phenotype and the QTLs for the coexpression modules (module eigengene QTL) provide the criteria for identification of the functionally related groups of genes that contribute to the phenotype (candidate modules). While we previously identified a brain transcriptional module whose QTL overlapped with a QTL for levels of alcohol consumption in HXB/BXH RI rat strains and 12 selected rat lines, this module did not account for all of the genetic variation in alcohol consumption. Our search for QTL overlap and correlation of coexpression modules with phenotype can, however, be applied to any organ in which the transcriptome has been measured, and this represents a holistic approach in the search for genetic contributors to complex traits. Previous work has implicated liver/brain interactions, particularly involving inflammatory/immune processes, as influencing alcohol consumption levels. We have now analyzed the liver transcriptome of the HXB/BXH RI rat panel in relation to the behavioral trait of alcohol consumption. We used RNA-Seq and microarray data to construct liver transcriptional networks, and identified a liver candidate transcriptional coexpression module that explained 24% of the genetic variance in voluntary alcohol consumption. The transcripts in this module focus attention on liver secretory products that influence inflammatory and immune signaling pathways. We propose that these liver secretory products can interact with brain mechanisms that affect alcohol consumption, and targeting these pathways provides a potential approach to reducing high levels of alcohol intake and also protecting the integrity of the liver and other organs.

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