Contact: Website: http://www.independent.ie/ Pubdate: Mon, 13 Jul 1998 Author: ROBERT MATTHEWS GENE-LINK BREAKTHROUGH MAY EXPLAIN DRUG ADDICTION SCIENTISTS have identified why some people may be genetically more susceptible than others to becoming addicts if they experiment with drugs or alcohol. By discovering a key genetic sequence linked to drug and alcohol abuse, the scientists believe they will be able to find ways to help at-risk individuals avoid addiction. Researchers have long suspected that genes play a key role in drug and alcohol abuse, with studies of families of addicts hinting that a disposition to addiction may be at least partly inherited. Many now believe certain types of gene make brain cells more susceptible to the effects of drugs, such as cocaine and heroin. These drugs home in on so-called dopamine receptors on the surface of brain cells suggesting that gene sequences linked to these receptors may be more common among drug addicts. A team at the University of Pittsburgh has now put this theory to the test by looking for a genetic sequence known as DRD5, which animal studies have linked to cocaine addiction. Testing for the presence of the sequence among dozens of drug addicts, they found the genetic sequence appeared in more than 80pc of abusers, compared with barely half of the ordinary population. Reporting their results in the journal Behavior Genetics, the team added that more than one third of the drug addicts tested had inherited two copies of the sequence from their parents, making the genetic effect particularly strong. By contrast, only one in seven of non-addicts had both copies. Almost half had none at all. According to Dr Michael Vanyukov, head of the genetic research team at the university's Centre for Education and Drug Abuse Research, the results point strongly to a genetic influence on drug and alcohol abuse. However, he stressed that this did not mean there was a "gene for drug abuse," or that those with the gene were condemned to a life of addiction. "This particular genetic sequence is pretty common in the population, so a blood test would not be very helpful in identifying specific individuals," said Dr Vanyukov. "The real importance of this research is that it helps us sift out the role of genes in drug abuse, and discover the role played by environmental effects." Dr Vanyukov added that the finding could lead to more sophisticated ways of assessing a person's risk to drug abuse. "At the moment, people are classified as either at risk or not at risk by psychological tests which can be fairly arbitrary. "We hope to develop a measure of risk that would include both relevant genes and environmental factors, and develop preventative measures that could offset even a high genetic predisposition to addiction." British experts on addiction agreed that the discovery may prove useful in identifying environmental factors behind drug addiction, but warned that past claims of genetic links to behavioural traits had often proved premature. "One of the problems with this type of research is that the findings turn out to apply only to one group or population," said Dr Clare Stanford of the University College, London. "There have to be studies like this worldwide to confirm this kind of link." - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski