rs10790112 - RPL15P15 - LINC02151

Magnitude 2.2 · 2 studies on file

Reported associations

  • Genome-wide meta-analyses of cross substance use disorders in diverse populations - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 41057643

    ABSTRACT: Substance use disorders (SUDs, including alcohol, cannabis, opioids, and tobacco) represent significant public health challenges. The estimated heritability of SUDs is ~50% and many individuals experience multiple SUDs concurrently. Studies have demonstrated the existence of genes shared across multiple SUDs, and identifying these SUD-shared genes is critical to developing novel prevention and treatment strategies. Here, we conducted the largest cross SUD meta-analysis to date to identify SUD-shared genes using samples genetically similar to 1000 Genomes Project European (1kg-EUR-like), African (1kg-AFR-like), and American mixed (1kg-AMR-like) populations. We defined variants that had the same direction of effects across different SUDs (i.e., concordant variants) as SUD-shared. I

  • Genome-wide meta-analysis of problematic alcohol use in 435,563 individuals yields insights into biology and relationships with other traits - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 32451486

    ABSTRACT: Problematic alcohol use (PAU) is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide. Although genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified PAU risk genes, the genetic architecture of this trait is not fully understood. We conducted a proxy-phenotype meta-analysis of PAU combining alcohol use disorder and problematic drinking in 435,563 European-ancestry individuals. We identified 29 independent risk variants, 19 of them novel. PAU was genetically correlated with 138 phenotypes, including substance use and psychiatric traits. Phenome-wide polygenic risk score analysis in an independent biobank sample (BioVU, n=67,589) confirmed the genetic correlations between PAU and substance use and psychiatric disorders. Genetic heritability of PAU was enriched in brain and in conser


Auto-generated from study metadata. AI-synthesised commentary is added when this entry is regenerated through content-service's LLM mode.

Lifestyle context

Concrete actions anchored to the cited research. We do not prescribe, we describe.

Discuss with your doctor

  • substance use disorder genetic risk assessment Moderate

    rs10790112 T allele shows genome-wide significant association with substance use disorder (p < 1e-10, n=1.5M+), potentially through altered brain gene expression

    discuss with healthcare provider to assess individual risk and develop prevention strategy

Lifestyle

  • minimize alcohol and recreational drug use Moderate

    genetic predisposition to substance use disorder may indicate heightened vulnerability to addiction and adverse substance use outcomes

    exercise caution with potentially addictive substances, particularly in high-risk situations