- Browse by Author
Browsing by Author "Gizer, Ian R."
Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Binge drinking trajectories across adolescence and early adulthood: Associations with genetic influences for dual-systems impulsive personality traits, alcohol consumption, and alcohol use disorder(medRxiv, 2024-10-16) Miller, Alex P.; Spychala, Kellyn M.; Slutske, Wendy S.; Fromme, Kim; Gizer, Ian R.; Psychiatry, School of MedicineBinge drinking is a relatively common pattern of alcohol use among youth with normative frequency trajectories peaking in emerging and early adulthood. Frequent binge drinking is a critical risk factor for not only the development of alcohol use disorders (AUDs) but also increased odds of alcohol-related injury and death, and thus constitutes a significant public health concern. Changes in binge drinking across development are strongly associated with changes in impulsive personality traits (IPTs) which have been hypothesized as intermediate phenotypes associated with genetic risk for heavy alcohol use and AUD. The current study sought to examine the extent to which longitudinal changes in binge drinking and intoxication frequency across adolescence and early adulthood are associated with genetic influences underlying dual-systems IPTs (i.e., top-down [lack of self-control] and bottom-up [sensation seeking and urgency] constructs) alongside genetic risk for alcohol consumption and AUD. Associations were tested using conditional latent growth curve polygenic score (PGS) models in three independent longitudinal samples (N=10,554). Results suggested consistent significant and independent associations across all samples between sensation seeking PGSs and model intercepts (i.e., higher frequency of binge drinking at first measurement occasion) and alcohol consumption PGSs and model slopes (i.e., steeper increases toward peak binge drinking frequency). Urgency PGSs were not significantly associated with changes in binge drinking or intoxication frequency. Collectively, these findings highlight the role of unique but correlated IPT and alcohol-specific genetic factors in the emergence and escalation of binge drinking during adolescence and early adulthood.Item CHRNA5 and CHRNA3 variants and level of neuroticism in young adult Mexican American men and women(Cambridge University Press, 2014-04) Criado, José R.; Gizer, Ian R.; Edenberg, Howard J.; Ehlers, Cindy L.; Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, IU School of MedicineA lifetime history of alcohol dependence has been associated with elevations in neuroticism in Mexican American young adults. The identification of genetic markers associated with neuroticism and their influence on the development of alcohol use disorders (AUD) may contribute to our understanding of the relationship between personality traits and the increased risk of AUD in Mexican Americans. The purpose of this study was to investigate associations between neuroticism and 13 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the nicotinic acetylcholine (nAChR) α5-subunit (CHRNA5) and α3-subunit (CHRNA3) genes in young adult Mexican American men and women. Participants were four hundred sixty-five young adult Mexican American men and women who are literate in English and are residing legally in San Diego County. Each participant gave a blood sample and completed a structured diagnostic interview. Neuroticism was assessed using the Maudsley Personality Inventory. The minor alleles of four CHRNA5 polymorphisms (rs588765, rs601079, rs680244 and rs555018) and three CHRNA3 polymorphisms (rs578776, rs6495307 and rs3743078) showed associations with neuroticism. Several of these SNPs also displayed nominal associations with DSM-IV alcohol and nicotine dependence, but tests of mediation suggested that these relations could be partially explained by the presence of co-occurring neuroticism. These findings suggest that genetic variations in nicotinic receptor genes may influence the development of neuroticism, which in turn is involved in the development of AUDs and nicotine dependence in Mexican American young adults.Item Fine-mapping genomic loci refines bipolar disorder risk genes(medRxiv, 2024-02-13) Koromina, Maria; Ravi, Ashvin; Panagiotaropoulou, Georgia; Schilder, Brian M.; Humphrey, Jack; Braun, Alice; Bidgeli, Tim; Chatzinakos, Chris; Coombes, Brandon; Kim, Jaeyoung; Liu, Xiaoxi; Terao, Chikashi; O'Connell, Kevin S.; Adams, Mark; Adolfsson, Rolf; Alda, Martin; Alfredsson, Lars; Andlauer, Till F. M.; Andreassen, Ole A.; Antoniou, Anastasia; Baune, Bernhard T.; Bengesser, Susanne; Biernacka, Joanna; Boehnke, Michael; Bosch, Rosa; Cairns, Murray; Carr, Vaughan J.; Casas, Miquel; Catts, Stanley; Cichon, Sven; Corvin, Aiden; Craddock, Nicholas; Dafnas, Konstantinos; Dalkner, Nina; Dannlowski, Udo; Degenhardt, Franziska; Di Florio, Arianna; Dikeos, Dimitris; Fellendorf, Frederike Tabea; Ferentinos, Panagiotis; Forstner, Andreas J.; Forty, Liz; Frye, Mark; Fullerton, Janice M.; Gawlik, Micha; Gizer, Ian R.; Gordon-Smith, Katherine; Green, Melissa J.; Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria; Guzman-Parra, José; Hahn, Tim; Henskens, Frans; Hillert, Jan; Jablensky, Assen V.; Jones, Lisa; Jones, Ian; Jonsson, Lina; Kelsoe, John R.; Kircher, Tilo; Kirov, George; Kittel-Schneider, Sarah; Kogevinas, Manolis; Landén, Mikael; Leboyer, Marion; Lenger, Melanie; Lissowska, Jolanta; Lochner, Christine; Loughland, Carmel; MacIntyre, Donald; Martin, Nicholas G.; Maratou, Eirini; Mathews, Carol A.; Mayoral, Fermin; McElroy, Susan L.; McGregor, Nathaniel W.; McIntosh, Andrew; McQuillin, Andrew; Michie, Patricia; Milanova, Vihra; Mitchell, Philip B.; Moutsatsou, Paraskevi; Mowry, Bryan; Müller-Myhsok, Bertram; Myers, Richard; Nenadić, Igor; Nöthen, Markus M.; O'Donovan, Claire; O'Donovan, Michael; Ophoff, Roel A.; Owen, Michael J.; Pantelis, Chris; Pato, Carlos; Pato, Michele T.; Patrinos, George P.; Pawlak, Joanna M.; Perlis, Roy H.; Porichi, Evgenia; Posthuma, Danielle; Ramos-Quiroga, Josep Antoni; Reif, Andreas; Reininghaus, Eva Z.; Ribasés, Marta; Rietschel, Marcella; Schall, Ulrich; Schulze, Thomas G.; Scott, Laura; Scott, Rodney J.; Serretti, Alessandro; Shannon Weickert, Cynthia; Smoller, Jordan W.; Soler Artigas, Maria; Stein, Dan J.; Streit, Fabian; Toma, Claudio; Tooney, Paul; Vieta, Eduard; Vincent, John B.; Waldman, Irwin D.; Weickert, Thomas; Witt, Stephanie H.; Hong, Kyung Sue; Ikeda, Masashi; Iwata, Nakao; Świątkowska, Beata; Won, Hong-Hee; Edenberg, Howard J.; Ripke, Stephan; Raj, Towfique; Coleman, Jonathan R. I.; Mullins, Niamh; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineBipolar disorder (BD) is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. While the largest published genome-wide association study identified 64 BD risk loci, the causal SNPs and genes within these loci remain unknown. We applied a suite of statistical and functional fine-mapping methods to these loci, and prioritized 22 likely causal SNPs for BD. We mapped these SNPs to genes, and investigated their likely functional consequences by integrating variant annotations, brain cell-type epigenomic annotations, brain quantitative trait loci, and results from rare variant exome sequencing in BD. Convergent lines of evidence supported the roles of SCN2A, TRANK1, DCLK3, INSYN2B, SYNE1, THSD7A, CACNA1B, TUBBP5, PLCB3, PRDX5, KCNK4, AP001453.3, TRPT1, FKBP2, DNAJC4, RASGRP1, FURIN, FES, YWHAE, DPH1, GSDMB, MED24, THRA, EEF1A2, and KCNQ2 in BD. These represent promising candidates for functional experiments to understand biological mechanisms and therapeutic potential. Additionally, we demonstrated that fine-mapping effect sizes can improve performance and transferability of BD polygenic risk scores across ancestrally diverse populations, and present a high-throughput fine-mapping pipeline (https://github.com/mkoromina/SAFFARI).Item Genetic Risk for Alcohol Use Disorder in Relation to Individual Symptom Criteria: Do Polygenic Indices Provide Unique Information for Understanding Severity and Heterogeneity?(medRxiv, 2024-09-23) Kim, Yongguk; Lane, Sean P.; Miller, Alex P.; Wilhelmsen, Kirk C.; Gizer, Ian R.; Psychiatry, School of MedicineAlcohol Use Disorder (AUD) is a heterogenous category with many unique configurations of symptoms. Previous investigations of AUD heterogeneity using molecular genetics methods studied the association between genetic liability and individual AUD symptoms at the latent level or focusing on a small number of genetic variants. Notably, these studies did not investigate potential severity differences between symptoms in their genetic analyses. Therefore, the current study aimed to examine the genetic risk for individual AUD symptom criteria by using a polygenic risk score (PRS) approach to assess the relative severity of each AUD symptom and test for associates with AUD symptoms above and beyond a unidimensional AUD construct. An AUD PRS was created using summary statistics obtained from published genome-wide association studies (GWAS), and Multiple Indicators Multiple Causes (MIMIC) models were employed to examine the effect of the PRS on overall AUD severity as well as on individual symptoms after accounting for this overall effect. The phenotypic severity of AUD symptoms was highly correlated with the genetic severity of AUD symptoms (r = 0.78). Results of MIMIC models indicated that the AUD PRS significantly predicted the AUD factor. Regression paths testing the unique, direct effects of the PRS on individual AUD symptoms, independent of the latent AUD factor, were not significant. These results imply that PRSs derived from GWAS of AUD influence symptom expression through a single genetic factor that is highly correlated with the relative severity of individual symptoms when measured at the phenotypic level. Item-level GWAS of AUD symptoms are needed to further parse heterogeneous symptom expression and allow for more nuanced tests of these conclusions.Item Genome-wide association study of more than 40,000 bipolar disorder cases provides new insights into the underlying biology(Springer Nature, 2021-06) Mullins, Niamh; Forstner, Andreas J.; O'Connell, Kevin S.; Coombes, Brandon; Coleman, Jonathan R.I.; Qiao, Zhen; Als, Thomas D.; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Børte, Sigrid; Bryois, Julien; Charney, Alexander W.; Drange, Ole Kristian; Gandal, Michael J.; Hagenaars, Saskia P.; Ikeda, Masashi; Kamitaki, Nolan; Kim, Minsoo; Krebs, Kristi; Panagiotaropoulou, Georgia; Schilder, Brian M.; Sloofman, Laura G.; Steinberg, Stacy; Trubetskoy, Vassily; Winsvold, Bendik S.; Won, Hong-Hee; Abramova, Liliya; Adorjan, Kristina; Agerbo, Esben; Al Eissa, Mariam; Albani, Diego; Alliey-Rodriguez, Ney; Anjorin, Adebayo; Antilla, Verneri; Antoniou, Anastasia; Awasthi, Swapnil; Baek, Ji Hyun; Bækvad-Hansen, Marie; Bass, Nicholas; Bauer, Michael; Beins, Eva C.; Bergen, Sarah E.; Birner, Armin; Pedersen, Carsten Bøcker; Bøen, Erlend; Boks, Marco P.; Bosch, Rosa; Brum, Murielle; Brumpton, Ben M.; Brunkhorst-Kanaan, Nathalie; Budde, Monika; Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas; Byerley, William; Cairns, Murray; Casas, Miquel; Cervantes, Pablo; Clarke, Toni-Kim; Cruceanu, Cristiana; Cuellar-Barboza, Alfredo; Cunningham, Julie; Curtis, David; Czerski, Piotr M.; Dale, Anders M.; Dalkner, Nina; David, Friederike S.; Degenhardt, Franziska; Djurovic, Srdjan; Dobbyn, Amanda L.; Douzenis, Athanassios; Elvsåshagen, Torbjørn; Escott-Price, Valentina; Ferrier, I. Nicol; Fiorentino, Alessia; Foroud, Tatiana M.; Forty, Liz; Frank, Josef; Frei, Oleksandr; Freimer, Nelson B.; Frisén, Louise; Gade, Katrin; Garnham, Julie; Gelernter, Joel; Pedersen, Marianne Giørtz; Gizer, Ian R.; Gordon, Scott D.; Gordon-Smith, Katherine; Greenwood, Tiffany A.; Grove, Jakob; Guzman-Parra, José; Ha, Kyooseob; Haraldsson, Magnus; Hautzinger, Martin; Heilbronner, Urs; Hellgren, Dennis; Herms, Stefan; Hoffmann, Per; Holmans, Peter A.; Huckins, Laura; Jamain, Stéphane; Johnson, Jessica S.; Kalman, Janos L.; Kamatani, Yoichiro; Kennedy, James L.; Kittel-Schneider, Sarah; Knowles, James A.; Kogevinas, Manolis; Koromina, Maria; Kranz, Thorsten M.; Kranzler, Henry R.; Kubo, Michiaki; Kupka, Ralph; Kushner, Steven A.; Lavebratt, Catharina; Lawrence, Jacob; Leber, Markus; Lee, Heon-Jeong; Lee, Phil H.; Levy, Shawn E.; Lewis, Catrin; Liao, Calwing; Lucae, Susanne; Lundberg, Martin; MacIntyre, Donald J.; Magnusson, Sigurdur H.; Maier, Wolfgang; Maihofer, Adam; Malaspina, Dolores; Maratou, Eirini; Martinsson, Lina; Mattheisen, Manuel; McCarroll, Steven A.; McGregor, Nathaniel W.; McGuffin, Peter; McKay, James D.; Medeiros, Helena; Medland, Sarah E.; Millischer, Vincent; Montgomery, Grant W.; Moran, Jennifer L.; Morris, Derek W.; Mühleisen, Thomas W.; O'Brien, Niamh; O'Donovan, Claire; Loohuis, Loes M. Olde; Oruc, Lilijana; Papiol, Sergi; Pardiñas, Antonio F.; Perry, Amy; Pfennig, Andrea; Porichi, Evgenia; Potash, James B.; Quested, Digby; Raj, Towfique; Rapaport, Mark H.; DePaulo, J. Raymond; Regeer, Eline J.; Rice, John P.; Rivas, Fabio; Rivera, Margarita; Roth, Julian; Roussos, Panos; Ruderfer, Douglas M.; Sánchez-Mora, Cristina; Schulte, Eva C.; Senner, Fanny; Sharp, Sally; Shilling, Paul D.; Sigurdsson, Engilbert; Sirignano, Lea; Slaney, Claire; Smeland, Olav B.; Smith, Daniel J.; Sobell, Janet L.; Søholm Hansen, Christine; Artigas, Maria Soler; Spijker, Anne T.; Stein, Dan J.; Strauss, John S.; Świątkowska, Beata; Terao, Chikashi; Thorgeirsson, Thorgeir E.; Toma, Claudio; Tooney, Paul; Tsermpini, Evangelia-Eirini; Vawter, Marquis P.; Vedder, Helmut; Walters, James T.R.; Witt, Stephanie H.; Xi, Simon; Xu, Wei; Yang, Jessica Mei Kay; Young, Allan H.; Young, Hannah; Zandi, Peter P.; Zhou, Hang; Zillich, Lea; Adolfsson, Rolf; Agartz, Ingrid; Alda, Martin; Alfredsson, Lars; Babadjanova, Gulja; Backlund, Lena; Baune, Bernhard T.; Bellivier, Frank; Bengesser, Susanne; Berrettini, Wade H.; Blackwood, Douglas H.R.; Boehnke, Michael; Børglum, Anders D.; Breen, Gerome; Carr, Vaughan J.; Catts, Stanley; Corvin, Aiden; Craddock, Nicholas; Dannlowski, Udo; Dikeos, Dimitris; Esko, Tõnu; Etain, Bruno; Ferentinos, Panagiotis; Frye, Mark; Fullerton, Janice M.; Gawlik, Micha; Gershon, Elliot S.; Goes, Fernando S.; Green, Melissa J.; Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria; Hauser, Joanna; Henskens, Frans; Hillert, Jan; Hong, Kyung Sue; Hougaard, David M.; Hultman, Christina M.; Hveem, Kristian; Iwata, Nakao; Jablensky, Assen V.; Jones, Ian; Jones, Lisa A.; Kahn, René S.; Kelsoe, John R.; Kirov, George; Landén, Mikael; Leboyer, Marion; Lewis, Cathryn M.; Li, Qingqin S.; Lissowska, Jolanta; Lochner, Christine; Loughland, Carmel; Martin, Nicholas G.; Mathews, Carol A.; Mayoral, Fermin; McElroy, Susan L.; McIntosh, Andrew M.; McMahon, Francis J.; Melle, Ingrid; Michie, Patricia; Milani, Lili; Mitchell, Philip B.; Morken, Gunnar; Mors, Ole; Mortensen, Preben Bo; Mowry, Bryan; Müller-Myhsok, Bertram; Myers, Richard M.; Neale, Benjamin M.; Nievergelt, Caroline M.; Nordentoft, Merete; Nöthen, Markus M.; O'Donovan, Michael C.; Oedegaard, Ketil J.; Olsson, Tomas; Owen, Michael J.; Paciga, Sara A.; Pantelis, Chris; Pato, Carlos; Pato, Michele T.; Patrinos, George P.; Perlis, Roy H.; Posthuma, Danielle; Ramos-Quiroga, Josep Antoni; Reif, Andreas; Reininghaus, Eva Z.; Ribasés, Marta; Rietschel, Marcella; Ripke, Stephan; Rouleau, Guy A.; Saito, Takeo; Schall, Ulrich; Schalling, Martin; Schofield, Peter R.; Schulze, Thomas G.; Scott, Laura J.; Scott, Rodney J.; Serretti, Alessandro; Weickert, Cynthia Shannon; Smoller, Jordan W.; Stefansson, Hreinn; Stefansson, Kari; Stordal, Eystein; Streit, Fabian; Sullivan, Patrick F.; Turecki, Gustavo; Vaaler, Arne E.; Vieta, Eduard; Vincent, John B.; Waldman, Irwin D.; Weickert, Thomas W.; Werge, Thomas; Wray, Naomi R.; Zwart, John-Anker; Biernacka, Joanna M.; Nurnberger, John I.; Cichon, Sven; Edenberg, Howard J.; Stahl, Eli A.; McQuillin, Andrew; Florio, Arianna Di; Ophoff, Roel A.; Andreassen, Ole A.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineBipolar disorder is a heritable mental illness with complex etiology. We performed a genome-wide association study of 41,917 bipolar disorder cases and 371,549 controls of European ancestry, which identified 64 associated genomic loci. Bipolar disorder risk alleles were enriched in genes in synaptic signaling pathways and brain-expressed genes, particularly those with high specificity of expression in neurons of the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. Significant signal enrichment was found in genes encoding targets of antipsychotics, calcium channel blockers, antiepileptics and anesthetics. Integrating expression quantitative trait locus data implicated 15 genes robustly linked to bipolar disorder via gene expression, encoding druggable targets such as HTR6, MCHR1, DCLK3 and FURIN. Analyses of bipolar disorder subtypes indicated high but imperfect genetic correlation between bipolar disorder type I and II and identified additional associated loci. Together, these results advance our understanding of the biological etiology of bipolar disorder, identify novel therapeutic leads and prioritize genes for functional follow-up studies.Item Multi-ancestral genome-wide association study of clinically defined nicotine dependence reveals strong genetic correlations with other substance use disorders and health-related traits(medRxiv, 2025-02-03) Johnson, Emma C.; Lai, Dongbing; Miller, Alex P.; Hatoum, Alexander S.; Deak, Joseph D.; Balbona, Jared V.; Baranger, David A. A.; Galimberti, Marco; Sanichwankul, Kittipong; Thorgeirsson, Thorgeir; McColbert, Sarah; Sanchez-Roige, Sandra; Adhikari, Keyrun; Docherty, Anna; Degenhardt, Louisa; Edwards, Tobias; Fox, Louis; Giannelis, Alexandros; Jeffries, Paul; Korhonen, Tellervo; Morrison, Claire; Nunez, Yaira Z.; Palviainen, Teemu; Su, Mei-Hsin; Romero Villela, Pamela N.; Wetherill, Leah; Willoughby, Emily A.; Zellers, Stephanie; Bierut, Laura; Buchwald, Jadwiga; Copeland, William; Corley, Robin; Friedman, Naomi P.; Foroud, Tatiana M.; Gillespie, Nathan A.; Gizer, Ian R.; Heath, Andrew C.; Hickie, Ian B.; Kaprio, Jaakko A.; Keller, Matthew C.; Lee, James L.; Lind, Penelope A.; Madden, Pamela A.; Maes, Hermine H. M.; Martin, Nicholas G.; McGue, Matt; Medland, Sarah E.; Nelson, Elliot C.; Pearson, John V.; Porjesz, Bernice; Stallings, Michael; Vrieze, Scott; Wilhelmsen, Kirk C.; Walters, Raymond K.; Polimanti, Renato; Malison, Robert T.; Zhou, Hang; Stefansson, Kari; Potenza, Marc N.; Mutirangura, Apiwat; Shotelersuk, Vorasuk; Kalayasiri, Rasmon; Edenberg, Howard J.; Gelernter, Joel; Agrawal, Arpana; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineGenetic research on nicotine dependence has utilized multiple assessments that are in weak agreement. We conducted a genome-wide association study of nicotine dependence defined using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-NicDep) in 61,861 individuals (47,884 of European ancestry, 10,231 of African ancestry, 3,746 of East Asian ancestry) and compared the results to other nicotine-related phenotypes. We replicated the well-known association at the CHRNA5 locus (lead SNP: rs147144681, p =1.27E-11 in European ancestry; lead SNP = rs2036527, p = 6.49e-13 in cross-ancestry analysis). DSM-NicDep showed strong positive genetic correlations with cannabis use disorder, opioid use disorder, problematic alcohol use, lung cancer, material deprivation, and several psychiatric disorders, and negative correlations with respiratory function and educational attainment. A polygenic score of DSM-NicDep predicted DSM-5 tobacco use disorder and 6 of 11 individual diagnostic criteria, but none of the Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND) items, in the independent NESARC-III sample. In genomic structural equation models, DSM-NicDep loaded more strongly on a previously identified factor of general addiction liability than did a "problematic tobacco use" factor (a combination of cigarettes per day and nicotine dependence defined by the FTND). Finally, DSM-NicDep was strongly genetically correlated with a GWAS of tobacco use disorder as defined in electronic health records, suggesting that combining the wide availability of diagnostic EHR data with nuanced criterion-level analyses of DSM tobacco use disorder may produce new insights into the genetics of this disorder.