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Papers of the Week


Papers: 4 May 2024 - 10 May 2024


2024 Apr 26


bioRxiv


38712202

Genome-wide association study reveals multiple loci for analgesia and opioid consumption behaviors associated with heroin vulnerability in outbred rats.

Authors

Kuhn BN, Cannella N, Sanches T, Peng B, Chitre A, Polesskaya O, Gupta A, Woods LCS, Chung D, Ciccocioppo R, Kalivas PW, Palmer AA

Abstract

The increased prevalence of opioid use disorder (OUD) has made it imperative to disentangle the biological mechanisms contributing to individual differences in susceptibility to OUD. OUD shows strong heritability, however genetic variants contributing toward vulnerability remain poorly defined. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) using over 850 male and female heterogeneous stock rats to identify genes underlying behaviors associated with OUD such as analgesia, as well as heroin-taking, refraining and seeking behaviors. By using an animal model of OUD, we were able to identify genetic variants associated with distinct OUD behaviors while maintaining a uniform environment, an experimental design not easily achieved in humans. Furthermore, we applied an animal model capturing individual variation in OUD propensity to assess if GWAS results were associated with OUD vulnerable versus resilient behavioral phenotypes. Our findings confirm the heritability of several OUD-like behaviors, including overall phenotype. We identified several genetic variants associated with basal analgesia prior to heroin experience, heroin consumption, escalation of intake, and motivation to obtain heroin. , a regulator of microglia functional plasticity, and its eQTL were identified for heroin consumption, and were associated with an OUD vulnerable phenotype through phenotype wide association study analysis. Furthermore, the coding variant and the eQTL for break point are both known mediators of addiction-related behaviors, and correlated with OUD vulnerability. These findings identify novel genetic markers related to individual differences in the susceptibility to OUD-relevant behaviors.