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Expanding the genetic architecture of nicotine dependence and its shared genetics with multiple traits
Quach, B. C., Bray, M. J., Gaddis, N. C., Liu, M., Palviainen, T., Minica, C. C., Zellers, S., Sherva, R., Aliev, F., Nothnagel, M., Young, K. A., Marks, J. A., Young, H., Carnes, M. U., Guo, Y., Waldrop, A., Sey, N. Y. A., Landi, M. T., McNeil, D. W., ... Hancock, D. B. (2020). Expanding the genetic architecture of nicotine dependence and its shared genetics with multiple traits. Nature Communications, 11(1), Article 5562. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-19265-z
Cigarette smoking is the leading cause of preventable morbidity and mortality. Genetic variation contributes to initiation, regular smoking, nicotine dependence, and cessation. We present a Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND)-based genome-wide association study in 58,000 European or African ancestry smokers. We observe five genome-wide significant loci, including previously unreported loci MAGI2/GNAI1 (rs2714700) and TENM2 (rs1862416), and extend loci reported for other smoking traits to nicotine dependence. Using the heaviness of smoking index from UK Biobank (N = 33,791), rs2714700 is consistently associated; rs1862416 is not associated, likely reflecting nicotine dependence features not captured by the heaviness of smoking index. Both variants influence nearby gene expression (rs2714700/MAGI2-AS3 in hippocampus; rs1862416/TENM2 in lung), and expression of genes spanning nicotine dependence-associated variants is enriched in cerebellum. Nicotine dependence (SNP-based heritability = 8.6%) is genetically correlated with 18 other smoking traits (rg = 0.40-1.09) and co-morbidities. Our results highlight nicotine dependence-specific loci, emphasizing the FTND as a composite phenotype that expands genetic knowledge of smoking.