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Multiple Sclerosis 2020-Sep

Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors α7 and α9 modifies tobacco smoke risk for multiple sclerosis

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Farren Briggs

Keywords

Abstract

Introduction: Tobacco smoke exposure is an established risk factor for multiple sclerosis (MS), yet how it confers risk is not known. Evidence from observational studies suggests nicotine may be a protective component. Animal studies further support this hypothesis, demonstrating nicotine's protective effect in MS is mediated by the presence and absence of α7 and α9 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs), respectively.

Objective: To determine if variation in the genes encoding α7 and α9 nAChRs (cholinergic receptor nicotinic alpha 7 (CHRNA7) and alpha 9 (CHRNA9)) will modify MS risk conferred by tobacco smoking.

Methods: A multi-stage gene-environment (G×E) framework was utilized, including a case-control analysis (286 cases, 176 controls) with haplotype- and gene-based analyses, followed by an extension case-only (1053 cases) analysis for overlapping variants.

Results: The results suggest that CHRNA7 and CHRNA9 modifies MS risk conferred by tobacco smoke, where risk among smokers was increased in carriers of the minor CHRNA9 haplotype and in non-carriers the minor CHRNA7 haplotype. The findings are consistent with the pharmacology of these receptors and animal studies of MS.

Conclusion: This study implicates novel processes in MS initiation and demonstrate the need for further G×E studies to advancing our understanding of the missing heritability of MS.

Keywords: Gene–environment interaction; multiple sclerosis; nicotine receptors; tobacco smoke.

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