A grandparent-influenced locus for alcohol preference on mouse chromosome 2.

Bibliographic Details
Title: A grandparent-influenced locus for alcohol preference on mouse chromosome 2.
Authors: Lesscher, Heidi M.b.1, Kas, Martien J.h.1, Van Der Elst, Stefan1, Van Lith, Hein A.1, Vanderschuren, Louk J.m.j.1
Source: Pharmacogenetics. Sep2009, Vol. 19 Issue 9, p719-729. 11p.
Abstract: Loci on mouse chromosome 2 have previously been associated with ethanol consumption. Here, we used a limited access choice paradigm in which mice consume large quantities of ethanol (2-3 g/kg/2 h) with a high preference (>80%). In addition, mouse chromosome substitution strains were used to further evaluate the contribution of chromosome 2 to ethanol consumption.First, we compared the two parental inbred mouse strains, C57BL/6J and A/J, in the limited access choice paradigm for ethanol intake and ethanol preference, as well as for ethanol metabolism and taste sensitivity. Then, the effect of chromosome 2 substitution on these measures was determined. Compared with C57BL/6J mice, A/J and C57BL/6J-Chr 2A/NaJ (CSS-2) mice showed profoundly reduced ethanol intake and preference. The strains were not different with regard to ethanol metabolism or taste sensitivity. Limited access ethanol consumption in F2 progeny derived from reciprocal C57BL/6J×CSS-2 and CSS-2×C57BL/6J intercrosses and subsequent quantitative trait loci mapping identified two loci: one locus on chromosome 2 for ethanol intake and a separate locus on distal chromosome 2 for ethanol preference. This latter locus was dependent on the grandparental origin.Using a limited access choice paradigm, we found that mouse chromosome 2 carries an allelic variant of a locus for ethanol intake and a distinct locus selective for ethanol preference. The heritability of alcoholism has been suggested to be parent-specific, perhaps resulting from genetic imprinting. Our findings suggest that grandparent-influenced vulnerability for ethanol consumption is conferred by genes on chromosome 2, providing important new leads to enhance our understanding of the heritability of alcoholism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Academic Search Complete
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ISSN:0960314X
DOI:10.1097/FPC.0b013e3283311320
Published in:Pharmacogenetics
Language:English