American journal of medical genetics. Part B, Neuropsychiatric genetics : the official publication of the International Society of Psychiatric Genetics
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Am. J. Med. Genet. B Neuropsychiatr. Genet. · Sep 2008
DRD3, but not COMT or DRD2, genotype affects executive functions in healthy and first-episode psychosis adolescents.
Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) and dopamine receptors 2 (DRD2) and 3 (DRD3) have been associated with a higher risk of developing psychosis and with dopaminergic system (DAS) regulation. Frontal cognitive functioning has been proven to be a useful endophenotype for psychosis and it is partially controlled by the DAS. Val158Met (rs4680, COMT), Taq IA (rs1800497, DRD2) and Ser9Gly (rs6280; DRD3) polymorphisms were analyzed in a sample of 84 adolescent Caucasian patients with first-episode psychosis (ages 11-17) and 85 healthy Caucasian controls (ages 10-17). ⋯ The DRD3 Ser9Gly polymorphism seems to be involved with prefrontal cognition. This effect seems to be heterogeneous in terms of cognitive paradigms. The lack of association between COMT and DRD2 genotypes and cognition in our sample may be partially explained by the young age of the sample and the clinical heterogeneity of the patients.
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Am. J. Med. Genet. B Neuropsychiatr. Genet. · Sep 2008
Putative role of the COMT gene polymorphism (Val158Met) on verbal working memory functioning in a healthy population.
Working memory has been described as a neurocognitive probe of prefrontal brain functioning. Genetic variability related with catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene (Val158Met polymorphism) has received increasing attention as a possible modulator of working memory tasks in both schizophrenic patients and healthy subjects, although inconsistencies across studies have been found. This may be related to the existence of different working memory components, processes and modalities, which may have different sensitivities to subtle changes in dopamine levels and, therefore, the effect of the underlying COMT Val158Met genetic variability. ⋯ Moreover, the analysis for linear trend found that Met allele carriers showed significantly better performance than Val/Val individuals (B = 0.58 P = 0.031), although evidence for a linear trend was not found. None of the WCST indices differed among genotypes. Consistent with the hypothesis that Val158Met polymorphism (COMT gene) might account for individual differences on dopamine-dependent prefrontally related neurocognitive functions, the Letter-Number Sequencing task, which requires not only maintenance but also active manipulation of information seemed to be more sensitive to the disadvantageous Val/Val genotype in a large non-clinical sample.
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Am. J. Med. Genet. B Neuropsychiatr. Genet. · Sep 2008
Polymorphisms in the catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene influence plasma total homocysteine levels.
Elevated plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) is a risk factor for various disorders. We investigated whether functional polymorphisms in catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) influence tHcy, since COMT activity produces S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH), a homocysteine precursor. We hypothesized that high activity COMT variants would be associated with high tHcy, since they presumably result in increased formation of SAH. ⋯ High activity variants of COMT interact with the low activity variant of MTHFR to increase tHcy levels. The effect on tHcy may contribute to the reported associations of COMT genotype with psychiatric and neurobiological phenotypes. The results also indicate that COMT activity may influence a broader range of biochemical pathways than hitherto appreciated.