BMC Genomics (Mar 2024)

SNP-based and haplotype-based genome-wide association on drug dependence in Han Chinese

  • Hanli Xu,
  • Yulin Kang,
  • Tingming Liang,
  • Sifen Lu,
  • Xiaolin Xia,
  • Zuhong Lu,
  • Lingming Hu,
  • Li Guo,
  • Lishu Zhang,
  • Jiaqiang Huang,
  • Lin Ye,
  • Peiye Jiang,
  • Yi Liu,
  • Li Xinyi,
  • Jin Zhai,
  • Zi Wang,
  • Yangyang Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-024-10117-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background Drug addiction is a serious problem worldwide and is influenced by genetic factors. The present study aimed to investigate the association between genetics and drug addiction among Han Chinese. Methods A total of 1000 Chinese users of illicit drugs and 9693 healthy controls were enrolled and underwent single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based and haplotype-based association analyses via whole-genome genotyping. Results Both single-SNP and haplotype tests revealed associations between illicit drug use and several immune-related genes in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region (SNP association: log10BF = 15.135, p = 1.054e-18; haplotype association: log10BF = 20.925, p = 2.065e-24). These genes may affect the risk of drug addiction via modulation of the neuroimmune system. The single-SNP test exclusively reported genome-wide significant associations between rs3782886 (SNP association: log10BF = 8.726, p = 4.842e-11) in BRAP and rs671 (SNP association: log10BF = 7.406, p = 9.333e-10) in ALDH2 and drug addiction. The haplotype test exclusively reported a genome-wide significant association (haplotype association: log10BF = 7.607, p = 3.342e-11) between a region with allelic heterogeneity on chromosome 22 and drug addiction, which may be involved in the pathway of vitamin B12 transport and metabolism, indicating a causal link between lower vitamin B12 levels and methamphetamine addiction. Conclusions These findings provide new insights into risk-modeling and the prevention and treatment of methamphetamine and heroin dependence, which may further contribute to potential novel therapeutic approaches.

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