TY - JOUR
PY - 2016//
TI - Association between oxytocin and receptor genetic polymorphisms and aggression in a northern Chinese Han population with alcohol dependence
JO - Neuroscience letters
A1 - Yang, Ling
A1 - Wang, Fan
A1 - Wang, Meiling
A1 - Han, Mei
A1 - Hu, Lufeng
A1 - Zheng, Minghua
A1 - Ma, Ji
A1 - Kang, Yimin
A1 - Wang, Pengxiang
A1 - Sun, Hongqiang
A1 - Zuo, Wei
A1 - Xie, Longteng
A1 - Wang, Aiju
A1 - Yu, Dongsheng
A1 - Liu, Yanlong
SP - 140
EP - 144
VL - 636
IS -
N2 - OBJECTIVE: Alcohol dependence (AD) is a common chronic brain disorder precipitated by complex interactions between biological, genetic, and environmental risk factors. Aggression often occurs in the context of AD. Previous studies have shown that Oxytocin (OXT) and OXT receptor (OXTR) are involved in the regulation of aggression. The present study investigated whether variations and interactions of OXT and OXTR genes were associated with AD-related aggression in a genetically homogeneous northern Chinese Han population.
METHODS: Three hundred and twenty-four male AD patients and 510 male healthy controls (HCs) were recruited. A Chinese version of the Buss-Perry Aggression Questionnaire was used as a subjective measurement of aggressive behavior. Three variations, rs2254298, rs53576, and rs6133010 were genotyped using TaqMan and ligase detection reaction for all subjects. Generalized Multifactor Dimensionality Reduction was used to detect interactions between genetic attributes and environmental attributes.
RESULTS: The frequencies of alleles and genotypes of rs6133010 were significantly different between AD patients and HCs (p<0.001). In HCs, the effect of genotype GG of rs53576 on hostility aggression was significantly stronger than that of genotype AA and AG (p=0.001 and p=0.004, respectively), and the subjects with the interaction combination of rs6133010AA×rs2254298GG×rs53576AG exhibited significant effect on physical aggression (p=0.0107).
CONCLUSION: The present study found that rs6133010 in the OXT gene is associated with AD in the northern Chinese Han population. The polymorphisms of OXT/R may play a key role in the susceptibility of AD-related aggression.
Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0304-3940 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2016.10.066 ID - ref1 ER -