The Rate of Change in Alcohol Misuse Across Adolescence is Heritable
Alexis Edwards, Jon Heron, Vladimir Vladimirov, Aaron Wolen, Daniel E Adkins, Fazil
Aliev, Matthew Hickman, and Kenneth Kendler. (2017). “The rate of change in alcohol
misuse across adolescence is heritable.” Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research,
41 (1): 57-64.
https://doi.org/10.1111/acer.13262
BACKGROUND:
Alcohol use typically begins during adolescence and escalates into young adulthood.
This represents an important period for the establishment of alcohol use and misuse
patterns, which can have psychosocial and medical consequences. Although changes in
alcohol use during this time have been phenotypically characterized, their genetic
nature is poorly understood.
METHODS:
Participants of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children completed the
Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) 4 times from age 16 to 20. We used
Mplus to construct a growth model characterizing changes in AUDIT scores across time
(N = 4,545, where data were available for at least 2 time points). The slope of the
model was used as the phenotype in a genomewide association study (N = 3,380), followed
by secondary genetic analyses.
RESULTS:
No individual marker met genomewide significance criteria. Top markers mapped to biologically
plausible candidate genes. The slope term was moderately heritable (h2SNP = 0.26,
p = 0.009), and replication attempts using a meta-analysis of independent samples
provided support for implicated variants at the aggregate level. Nominally significant
(p < 0.00001) markers mapped to putatively active genomic regions in brain tissue
more frequently than expected by chance.
CONCLUSIONS:
These results build on prior studies by demonstrating that common genetic variation
impacts alcohol misuse trajectories. Influential loci map to genes that merit additional
research, as well as to intergenic regions with regulatory functions in the central
nervous system. These findings underscore the complex biological nature of alcohol
misuse across development.