|   National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism No. 18 PH 357 July 1995
	 
 The Genetics of Alcoholism 
	 The idea that alcoholism runs in families is an ancient 
	one. In recent decades, science has advanced this idea from the status of 
	folk-observation to systematic investigation (1-3). In the 1970s, studies 
	documented that alcoholism does run in families (4,5). But does alcoholism run 
	in families because a child learns to become an alcoholic from parents and the 
	home environment, or because a child inherits genes that create an underlying 
	predisposition for alcoholism? Or both? The studies did not resolve these 
	questions. 
	 Why do we do genetic research? The discovery of a specific genetic 
	effect on the development of alcoholism would be beneficial for at least three 
	reasons. First, it would lead to the identification of some people at risk, who 
	could act to avoid developing alcohol-related problems (6,7). Second, it may 
	help us to understand the role of environmental factors that are critical in the 
	development of alcoholism (8). Third, it may lead to better treatments, based on 
	new understandings of the physiological mechanisms of alcoholism (9-11). 
	 Although investigations of the inheritance of a vulnerability 
	to alcoholism are discussed here, a separate and distinct issue, not 
	addressed here, is the possibility that a vulnerability to organ damage 
	by alcohol is under some genetic control (12). 
	 Researchers investigate possible genetic components of alcoholism 
	by studying populations and families as well as genetic, biochemical, and 
	neurobehavioral markers and characteristics (13,14). Two major methods of 
	investigating the inheritance of alcoholism are studies of twins and of adoptees 
	(15). Twin studies compare the incidence of alcoholism in identical twins with 
	the incidence of alcoholism in fraternal twins (16,17). If there is a genetic 
	component in the risk for alcoholism, then identical twins, who have identical 
	genes, would be expected to exhibit similar histories of developing alcoholism 
	(or not developing alcoholism). Fraternal twins, who are genetically different 
	individuals born at the same time, would be more likely to differ in their 
	tendencies to develop alcoholism. In general, researchers using the twin method 
	have found these expectations to be true. 
	 For example, Pickens and co-workers (18) studied 169 same-sex 
	pairs of twins, both males and females, at least one of which had sought 
	treatment for alcoholism. The researchers found greater concordance of alcohol 
	dependence in identical twins than in fraternal twins. They also found greater 
	concordance of alcohol abuse (defined by DSM-III--Diagnostic and Statistical 
	Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition, of the American Psychiatric 
	Association) in identical male twins but not in identical female twins. Other 
	twin studies have produced more detailed information; for example, Partanen and 
	co-workers (19), in studying 902 male Finnish twins, found that less severe 
	drinking patterns were less heritable, and more severe drinking patterns were 
	more heritable. 
	 Among the difficulties in designing twin studies is accounting for 
	unequal environmental conditions. Early studies assumed that the environments of 
	two fraternal twins were as similar to each other as were the environments of 
	two identical twins. Later studies showed that the environments of identical 
	twins are more alike than are the environments of fraternal twins, and recent 
	twin studies have taken this difference into account (14). The results of twin 
	studies are useful and have suggested the possibility of a genetic component in 
	inheritance (20); however, because focuses of the studies have varied, the 
	results are difficult to interpret. 
	 &# 009;Adoption studies may employ a number of techniques. One 
	is to compare the histories of children of alcoholics who are adopted by 
	nonalcoholics and grow up in a nondrinking environment with the histories of 
	children of nonalcoholics similarly raised in a nondrinking environment (21-23). 
	If genetic factors play a role, then the adopted children of alcoholics should 
	preferentially develop alcoholism as adults. 
	 Problems in designing and interpreting adoption studies result 
	from, among other things, the lack of detailed data on parents who give up 
	children for adoption, and environmental biases (as in the predominance of a 
	certain type of adopting family) (24). 
	 In a pioneering study of adopted Danish children, Goodwin and 
	co-workers found some evidence for the expected trends (4,21). Cloninger and 
	co-workers subsequently performed a series of much larger studies of adoptees, 
	which also revealed these trends (8,25). 
	 Cloninger and co-workers (23) hypothesized that so-called type II 
	alcoholics--characterized as having an early onset of drinking problems, usually 
	being male, and displaying personality disorders such as antisocial 
	behavior--had a more heritable form of alcoholism (26). However, other 
	researchers have argued that the scenario of inheritance is more complex, and 
	what is inherited is a mix of personality traits, such as those related to 
	antisocial behavior, rather than alcoholism itself (27). Genes might play a 
	direct role in the development of alcoholism, as in affecting the body's 
	metabolism of alcohol; or they might play a less direct role, influencing a 
	person's temperament or personality in such a way that the person becomes 
	vulnerable to alcoholism. 
	 Different models for the way in which alcoholism runs in families 
	have been suggested by a limited number of family studies. Interpretation of 
	these studies has been complicated by the likelihood that alcoholism is a 
	heterogeneous condition, that is, a collection of different conditions that look 
	similar, but whose mechanisms and modes of inheritance may differ. Additional 
	studies are needed to sort out the mechanisms of transmission (28,29). 
	 Population and family studies such as those cited above attempt to 
	establish the presence of a broad genetic influence on alcoholism. To 
	investigate specific genes, researchers have employed genetic marker studies. If 
        specific human genes are related to alcoholism, then genes lying close to them 
	on the same chromosome--and the traits they determine--may be inherited at the 
	same time that the risk of alcoholism is inherited. This phenomenon is called 
	linkage. An assortment of genes hypothesized to be linked to alcoholism has been 
	examined (30), but none has passed a rigorous test for linkage (31). 
	 Still being studied is a marker referred to as the dopamine D2 
	receptor, which Blum and co-workers (32) found to be present more often in 
	alcoholics than in nonalcoholics (also see 33). In animal studies, the dopamine 
	D2 receptor had been associated with brain functions relating to reward, 
	reinforcement, and motivation. However, a number of researchers have been unable 
	to duplicate the results of Blum's study (34,35). Some researchers believe 
	dopamine D2 might modulate the severity of alcoholism, rather than serve as a 
	primary cause. The dopamine D2 association continues to be interesting, but it 
	does not seem to be transmitted in families in such a way that it is responsible 
	for alcoholism; its role, if any, has yet to be determined (36). 
	 To search the human genome for specific genes related to 
	alcoholism, researchers employ two experimental techniques. The first, the 
	candidate gene approach, involves hypothesizing that particular genes are 
	related to the physiology of alcoholism and then individually testing these 
	genes for linkage (37). The second approach, scanning of the human genome, 
    	involves characterizing, piece by piece, the entire length of DNA and finding ge 
	nes that relate to alcoholism, without proposing candidate genes. 
	 Additionally, researchers use animal models to study the genetics 
	of alcoholism. These models have several advantages over human subjects. Using 
	animals, researchers can study larger numbers and more generations of subjects, 
	can arrange informative matings, can better manipulate the environment, and can 
	make measurements that would not be possible on humans. The main limitation of 
	using animals to study alcoholism is that there is no animal model of alcoholism 
	that encompasses the whole spectrum of alcoholic behaviors in humans. 
	 Researchers nevertheless have studied alcohol-related behaviors in 
        animals that are believed to resemble aspects of human alcoholism. These include 
    	consumption of and preference for alcohol, sedation induced by alcohol, 
	locomotor activation by alcohol (thought by some investigators to model the 
	euphoric effects of alcohol in humans), motor discoordination and hypothermia 
	induced by alcohol, withdrawal from alcohol, and tolerance to various effects of 
	alcohol (38). Researchers have succeeded in breeding lines of rodents with high 
	or low measures of most of these traits; this success demonstrates that the 
	traits are substantially genetically determined in rodents. 
	 Researchers, using animals, have yet to identify a single gene 
	responsible for any alcohol-related behavior. They have established that all of 
	the above-mentioned traits are determined by multiple genes, and that the 
	individual traits are, for the most part, determined independently of each 
	other. One useful distinction revealed by studies using animals is that genes 
	determining the tendency to become tolerant to certain effects of alcohol are 
	different from genes determining the severity of withdrawal symptoms (even 
	though in a clinical setting these reactions are often seen together) (38). 
	Using the powerful genetic methods available in animals, investigators are 
	beginning to map genes responsible for some of the animals' alcohol-related 
	behaviors. The recent development of a scheme that makes it possible to predict 
	the location on the human genome of a similar gene mapped in a mouse will 
	provide an additional source of candidate genes for linkage studies in humans 
	(39). This approach also will help to distinguish those animal behaviors now 
	under study that will be most valuable for understanding human alcohol-related 
	behavior.
	 
 The Genetics of Alcoholism--A Commentary byNIAAA Director Enoch Gordis, M.D.
 Progress has been made in understanding genetic 
	vulnerability to alcoholism. We know, for instance, that more than one gene is 
	likely to be responsible for this vulnerability. We now must determine what 
	these genes are and whether they are specific for alcohol or define something 
	more general, such as differences in temperament or personality that increase an 
	individual's vulnerability to alcoholism. We must also determine how genes and 
	the environment interact to influence vulnerability to alcoholism. Based on our 
	current understanding, it is probable that environmental influences will be at 
	least as important, and possibly more important, than genetic influences. 
        Success in uncovering the genes involved in a vulnerability to alcoholism will 
	help us to recognize the potential for alcoholism in high-risk individuals, to 
	intervene at an early stage, and to develop new treatments for alcohol-related 
	problems. This is a productive area of research that will continue to yield 
	important answers to the basic questions of what causes alcoholism and how we 
	can prevent and treat it.
	 
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