Source: N E W S C I E N T I S T Pubdate: May 3, 1997 contact: http://www.newscientist.com/ Heroin habit linked to gene by Michael Day A TENDENCY to abuse heroin can arise partly from your genes, say researchers in Israel. Experts say that their discovery of a link between a specific gene mutation and opiate addiction adds weight to the growing evidence that a handful of key genes play a role in a wide variety of addictions. The group, led by Richard Ebstein of the Sarah Herzog Memorial Hospital in Jerusalem, studied 141 men who were addicted to heroin. In each of the men the researchers analysed the gene which produces a receptor molecule, called the D4 receptor, for the brain chemical dopamine. The researchers had suspected that the D4 receptor was linked to opiate addiction because some studies have hinted that an abnormally long, mutated form of this gene is relatively common in people who demonstrate impulsive, "novelty seeking" behavioura trait that is common among drug addicts. "This appears to be contributing something to drug abuse and heroin abuse," Ebstein told New Scientist. In this month's issue of Molecular Psychiatry (vol 2, p 251), his team reports that this mutation was almost 25 times as common in the 141 addicted men as in 110 controls: 29 per cent of the addicts had the mutant D4 receptor gene, compared with 12 per cent of the controls. Studies of this type are controversial because of the possibility that the genetic trait only occurs in the racial group under investigation, and might not exist among addicted people in other ethnic populations. So the authors studied two related but distinct ethnic groups: Israeli Arabs and Sephardic Jews. They found that the ratio of normal to long D4 genes in the addicts and controls of both groups was similar. "This mutation in the D4 receptor has been associated with alcohol and nicotine abuse, so it's not that surprising that it is linked to heroin abuse too," says Kenneth Blum of the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, a leading researcher into addiction. "But it does show that the common genetic factors put people at greater risk of a variety of addictive behaviours. " Obviously, genetic factors do not cause addictionthey merely raise or lower the risk. "The environment has a big role to play," says Blum. Ebstein and his colleagues note that other, as yet unidentified genes may also contribute to the risk of addiction. Blum suspects that mutations in the genes for receptors called D2 and D1 may play a role.