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Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University of Otago
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Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference?

Dr Martin KennedyDepartment of PathologyChristchurch School of Medicine & Health SciencesUniversity of Otago

Page 2: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.
Page 3: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Topics:

Genes 101 Complex disorders 101 Are there genes for addiction? What might they do? How will we find them? What might they be used for?

Page 4: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Genes 101

Page 5: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

DNA, chromosomes & genes

Page 6: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Chromosome structure

Page 7: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Chromosomal

DNA

Page 8: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Complex disorders 101

Page 9: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Genes x Environment

Page 10: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Genetics contributes to most conditions

Genetics

Environment

cystic fibrosis

Genetics

Environment

AIDS

Genetics

Environment

coronary artery disease

Page 11: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Genetics

Environment

cystic fibrosis

Genetics

Environment

AIDS

Genetics

Environment

depression

Genetics contributes to most conditions

Page 12: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Genetics

Environment

cystic fibrosis

Genetics

Environment

AIDS

Genetics

Environment

addiction?

Genetics contributes to most conditions

Page 13: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Risk factors for complex disease

Environment Genes

Page 14: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

“Disease genes” (alleles)

Page 15: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Common genetic variants

Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) Each of us has about 2-3 million of these Many other less common variants

VNTRs Microsatellites Deletions/insertions etc

Page 16: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Are there genes for addiction?

Page 17: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Genetic epidemiology The pattern of incidence in families

and the population: Family studies Twin studies Adoption studies

Page 18: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Family studies of substance abuse disorders

Familial aggregation of alcoholism well established

Increasing empirical research that drug-use disorders also familial

Estimated 8-fold increased risk of drug disorders in relatives

Page 19: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.
Page 20: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Concordance in twin studies

McGuffin (1999)

Page 21: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Alcoholism in twins

Concordance Rate

Dizygotic (non-identical) 10-15%

Monozygotic (identical) 30-40%

Page 22: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Other evidence

Numerous twin studies indicate genetic factors in substance-use disorders.

Adoption studies provide strong support for genetic influences in liability to drug abuse.

Page 23: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Insights from animal studies

Page 24: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Flies MAY hold SOME clues to ASPECTS of alcoholism

Page 25: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.
Page 26: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Animal models of addiction Genetic models are partial Each addresses one or more of the

contributing traits rather than the disorder as a whole, e.g. reward tolerance pathological effects

Rodent gene mapping studies

Page 27: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

What might these genes do?

Page 28: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Candidate “addiction” genes

brain reward systems (e.g. dopamine pathways)

endogenous opioid system drug metabolism, uptake etc and many others, some no

doubt surprising!

Likely to function in:

Page 29: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

How will we find these genes?

Page 30: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

The Human Genome

“This scaffold has been handed down to us from our ancestors, and through it we are connected to all other life on earth.”

Svante Pääbo, 2001

Page 31: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Disease gene mapping

Association studies using DNA markers to ask whether a particular gene

variant is more commonly associated with occurrence of a disease

Linkage mapping using “DNA markers” to find the chromosomal location

of a disease gene By implication in relevant behavioural processes in

animal models Genes of major effect

Page 32: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Genome scan results

Page 33: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.
Page 34: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

What might these genes be used for?

Page 35: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Potential uses of genes

New avenues by which to explore the biology of the condition Research tools Improved medications

Tailored treatment (pharmacogenetics) New drug leads

Risk prediction?

Time

Page 36: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

My genes made me do it...

“...promoting the identification of susceptibility genes may ... have a negative impact by diminishing the perception of the importance of individual choice in health behavior.”

Merikangas & Risch, 2004

Page 37: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Less knowledge is not an option

“.. we would construe it as unethical to exclude people with a mental disorder from the possibility of benefit arising from an improved understanding of mental disorders.”

Nuffield Bioethics Council Report, 1998

Page 38: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Can genes make a difference?

A qualified “yes”:

Improved biological knowledge Research tools Tailored therapeutic drug prescribing Long term investment (planning for the future)

Page 39: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Will genes change the lives of practioners or consumers?

Not anytime soon! But new knowledge will eventually lead to changes in practice

Page 40: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Please don’t pay much attention to those headlines!

Page 41: Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.

Genes control biology, not behaviour.