4.7 Article

Single nucleotide polymorphisms rs148582811 regulates its host gene ARVCF expression to affect nicotine-associated hippocampus-dependent memory

Journal

ISCIENCE
Volume 26, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.108335

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Through genome-wide sequencing analysis, a genetic variant in the ARVCF gene was found to be associated with nicotine dependence. Further experiments demonstrated that this variant regulates the expression of the ARVCF gene, and that ARVCF is a causal gene for nicotine dependence. Additionally, the deletion of the ARVCF gene was shown to impair learning and memory, and alleviate nicotine-induced memory deficits.
Although numerous susceptibility loci are nominated for nicotine dependence (ND), no report showed any association of ARVCF with ND. Through genome-wide sequencing analysis, we first identified genetic variants associated nominally with ND and then replicated them in an independent sample. Of the six replicated variants, rs148582811 in ARVCF located in the enhancer-associated marker peak is attractive. The effective-median-based Mendelian randomization analysis indicated that ARVCF is a causal gene for ND. RNA-seq analysis detected decreased ARVCF expression in smokers compared to nonsmokers. Luciferase reporter assays indicated that rs148582811 and its located DNA fragment allele-specifically regulated ARVCF expression. Immunoprecipitation analysis revealed that transcription factor X-ray repair cross-complementing protein 5 (XRCC5) bound to the DNA fragment containing rs148582811 and allele-specifically regulated ARVCF expression at the mRNA and protein levels. With the Arvcf knockout mouse model, we showed that Arvcf deletion not only impairs hippocampus-dependent learning and memory, but also alleviated nicotine-induced memory deficits.

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