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Genetics of alcoholic liver disease and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Quentin AnsteeORCiD, Professor Ann DalyORCiD, Professor Chris Day

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Abstract

Excess alcohol consumption with consequent alcoholic liver disease (ALD) and metabolic syndrome-related nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) are recognized as the most common causes of liver dysfunction worldwide. However, although the majority of heavy drinkers and individuals with obesity/insulin resistance will develop steatosis, only a minority progress to steatohepatitis, fibrosis, and cirrhosis. Both ALD and NAFLD are best considered complex disease traits where subtle interpatient genetic variations and environment interact to produce disease phenotype and determine disease progression. A decade after the sequencing of the human genome, the development of technologies to support the comprehensive study of genomic variation has begun to provide new insights into the modifier genes that contribute to this interpatient variation. Here we review the current status of the field with particular focus on advances from recent genome-wide association studies and their translation into a better mechanistic understanding of pathogenesis.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Daly AK; Day CP; Anstee QM

Publication type: Review

Publication status: Published

Journal: Seminars in Liver Disease

Year: 2011

Volume: 31

Issue: 2

Pages: 128-146

Print publication date: 01/05/2011

ISSN (print): 0272-8087

ISSN (electronic): 1098-8971

Publisher: THIEME MEDICAL PUBL INC

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0031-1276643

DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1276643


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