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GWAS Study

Rare coding variants in CHRNB3 associate with reduced daily cigarette smoking across ancestries.

Rajagopal VM, Ziyatdinov A, Joseph T et al.

41735279 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
71059 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

RV
Rajagopal VM
ZA
Ziyatdinov A
JT
Joseph T
AA
Ayer A
AM
Ahmed M
MJ
Mbatchou J
ZY
Zou Y
AA
Averitt AJ
BN
Banerjee N
CM
Cantor M
TJ
Torres JM
CE
Chen E
VJ
Varela JR
JM
Jones M
OJ
Overton J
HO
Harari O
LL
Lotta L
AG
Abecasis G
BA
Baras A
BJ
Berumen J
KP
Kuri-Morales P
AJ
Alegre-Díaz J
TR
Tapia-Conyer R
CR
Collins R
EJ
Emberson JR
MJ
Marchini J
CG
Coppola G
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Rare coding variants that alter protein function and confer beneficial health effects can suggest potential drug targets. CHRNB3 encodes the β3 subunit of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors that bind nicotine and mediate its action in the brain. Here we report an exome-wide association study of number of cigarettes smoked per day (cig per day) in 37,897 current smokers from the Mexico City Prospective Study. We identify a deleterious missense variant in CHRNB3, p.Glu284Gly, that associates with a significant reduction in daily cigarette consumption. The missense variant is enriched in people of Indigenous Mexican ancestry but rare in other ancestries. We further identify a predicted loss-of-function variant in CHRNB3 that significantly associates with reduction in number of smoked cigarettes per day in participants of Japan Biobank. This variant is enriched in people of East Asian ancestry but is rare in other ancestries. Finally, we find that rare deleterious missense and predicted loss-of-function variants in aggregate associate with a reduction in the number of smoked cigarettes per day in individuals of European ancestry from the UK Biobank. Our results suggest that loss of function of CHRNB3 significantly associates with daily cigarette smoking, proposing β3 inhibition as a potential therapeutic strategy for nicotine addiction.

37,897 Indigenous Mexican ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

71059
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
33,162 Indigenous Mexican ancestry individuals
Replication Participants
Hispanic or Latin American
Ancestry
Mexico
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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