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FOR RELEASE: 14 JUNE 2000 AT 18:00 ET US Ohio State
University http://www.acs.ohio-state.edu/units/research/
Gene identified that may play role in psychological
disorders
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Researchers are now investigating a
gene they suspect may contribute to the development of psychological
disorders such as clinical anxiety or panic attacks.
A new study found that people with a particular variation
in the serotonin transporter gene (5-HTT) showed a greater fear response
during a laboratory experiment.
"While a single gene cannot be held accountable for
complex emotional states - such as anxiety disorders - we're beginning
to pinpoint which genetic traits may make a person susceptible to developing
psychological disorders," said Norman Schmidt, a study co-author and
an associate professor of psychology at Ohio State University.
The study appears in the new issue of the Journal of
Abnormal Psychology, published June 14.
The 5-HTT gene is responsible for regulating the chemical
serotonin, which helps transmit messages in the brain. The people who
showed a greater fear response during an experiment had a variation
in the gene. This variation is linked to increasing the regulation of
serotonin levels in the brain.
Increased regulation means that the neurons in the brain
take up serotonin faster, leaving less available. "A decreased availability
of serotonin may play a role in a variety of psychological disorders,"
Schmidt said.
In the study, 72 participants were separated into two
groups based on each individual's expression of the 5-HTT gene. The
researchers analyzed blood samples to determine how each subject expressed
the gene. These subjects were considered "super-normal," because none
had a history of psychiatric or medical disorders.
"When studying a risk factor for anxiety or other psychological
disorders, it's best to use subjects in whom the factor hasn't yet manifested,"
Schmidt said.
In order to determine each subject's fear response,
the participants took two breaths of pressurized air through a mouthpiece.
The breaths were spaced 10 minutes apart. One breath consisted of pressurized
room air, and the other was a carbon dioxide-oxygen mix (35 percent
CO2 and 65 percent O2). The carbon dioxide mix is designed to make subjects
feel they are momentarily short of breath, Schmidt said, which can aggravate
anxiety-related symptoms for some people.
Subjects with the "long" form of the 5-HTT gene - the
one implicated in the increased regulation of serotonin - reported feeling
more anxiety when they took the CO2 breath than did people with the
"short" form of the gene. "People with the long variation of this gene
seem to be at greater risk for responding with high levels of anxiety
or panic when in fearful situations," Schmidt said. "People in this
category may have a greater chance of developing anxiety disorders."
The researchers also found a relationship between the
5-HTT gene, a psychological trait called anxiety sensitivity, and how
the subjects' heart rates responded during the experiment.
Anxiety sensitivity - which was tested in the subjects
before the experiment began - involves the perception that certain bodily
sensations may produce harmful consequences. For example, people high
in anxiety sensitivity may perceive that shortness of breath indicates
suffocation, or that heart palpitations indicate a heart attack. People
low in anxiety sensitivity experience these sensations as unpleasant
but non-threatening.
The results showed that the long form of the 5-HTT gene
and high anxiety sensitivity may be a particularly bad combination.
People with that combination showed less heart rate variability during
the experiment than those with the long form and low anxiety sensitivity,
or those with the short form of the gene and high anxiety sensitivity.
People in the former group had an increase in their
heart rate when they took the carbon dioxide test, and their heart rate
remained high afterwards. For other people, the heart rate increased
as a result of the carbon dioxide test, but then dropped after it was
clear to them they were in no danger.
"People with both the genetic risk factor and the psychological
risk factor for anxiety showed the worst response to the fear-inducing
experiment," he said. "These people seemed to be at risk for responding
with more fear when faced with unpleasant bodily symptoms such as they
had in this experiment."
Researchers are just beginning to look at a host of
candidate genes - such as 5-HTT - that may be linked to anxiety and
panic disorders. "More candidate genes will be examined," Schmidt said.
"It's clear that a single gene is rarely the culprit - there are multiple
genes that are involved in most types of psychological disorders.
"But I think that the combination of genetic traits
and psychological traits may ultimately be the best way to predict psychological
disorders." http://www.eurekalert.org/releases/osu-git061200.html
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