About 1 in 8 Americans will be afflicted with alcohol dependence at some point during their lifetime. The CDC estimates that in 2006, excessive alcohol consumption cost the US economy 223.5 billion dollars. These data clearly demonstrate that alcohol use disorders are a looming health problem with serious consequences. Familial and twin-studies estimate the heritability of alcohol dependence to be around 50%, suggestive of a significant genetic contribution to the disorder. Understanding the genetic components underlying alcohol use disorders then, is instrumental in solving the problem. A spate of human genome wide association studies (GWAS) have identified risk loci associated with alcohol dependence, however, replication of has been difficult to achieve in most cases, excepting a small number of genes involved in alcohol metabolism. The failure to identify and replicate novel loci associated with alcohol use disorders is due, at least in part, to the extreme variance that exists in human populations. To circumvent these limitations, we are using the model organism C. elegans to identify novel loci involved in ethanol response. Our lab, with the help of the Andersen Lab at Northwestern University, is conducting a GWAS study on acute intoxication, using about 130 C. elegans strains isolated from across the globe. Our unbiased quantitative genetic approach is likely to identify novel loci that have been difficult or impossible to identify in human quantitative genetic studies for the reasons mentioned above. Thus far, we have found that there is significant natural variation in acute intoxication across the panel of wild-type strains. Previous work from our lab has demonstrated a significant role of the BK-potassium channel in ethanol response (Davis et al., 2014). Concordant with those findings, certain strains harboring unique coding differences in
slo-1, the gene which encodes the BK-potassium channel, display acute intoxication phenotypes that differ from the mean. These data, however, are still only correlative. Confusingly, other strains harboring early stop codons in
slo-1 are still able to become intoxicated, suggesting major roles for genes other than
slo-1 in the ethanol response of C. elegans. In the long term, our approach might also provide valuable insights into the evolution of ethanol response phenotypes in wild populations. We hope that by elucidating the genetic architecture of acute intoxication in C. elegans, we will discover novel risk factors that also underlie alcohol use disorders in human populations.