| Literature DB >> 19936317 |
Mary L Schneider1, Colleen F Moore, Julie A Larson, Christina S Barr, Onofre T Dejesus, Andrew D Roberts.
Abstract
Sensory processing disorder, characterized by over- or under-responsivity to non-noxious environmental stimuli, is a common but poorly understood disorder. We examined the role of prenatal alcohol exposure, serotonin transporter gene polymorphic region variation (rh5-HTTLPR), and striatal dopamine (DA) function on behavioral measures of sensory responsivity to repeated non-noxious sensory stimuli in macaque monkeys. Results indicated that early gestation alcohol exposure induced behavioral under-responsivity to environmental stimuli in monkeys carrying the short (s) rh5-HTTLPR allele compared to both early-exposed monkeys homozygous for the long (l) allele and monkeys from middle-to-late exposed pregnancies and controls, regardless of genotype. Moreover, prenatal timing of alcohol exposure altered the relationship between sensory scores and DA D(2)R availability. In early-exposed monkeys, a positive relationship was shown between sensory scores and DA D(2)R availability, with low or blunted DA function associated with under-responsive sensory function. The opposite pattern was found for the middle-to-late gestation alcohol-exposed group. These findings raise questions about how the timing of prenatal perturbation and genotype contributes to effects on neural processing and possibly alters neural connections.Entities:
Keywords: dopaminergic D2R binding; early gestation alcohol exposure; environment by gene interaction; genotype; sensory processing disorder; sensory processing scale for monkeys; serotonin transporter gene polymorphism; timing of moderate prenatal alcohol exposure
Year: 2009 PMID: 19936317 PMCID: PMC2779096 DOI: 10.3389/neuro.07.030.2009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Integr Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5145
Sample size and genotype distribution as a function of prenatal treatment conditions.
| Genotype | Control | Mid-Late | Early | Continuous |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 5 | 4 | 5 | |
| 4 | 2 | 5 | 4 |
Figure 1Interactions between timing of prenatal alcohol exposure and rh5-HTTLPR genotype on sensory responsivity behavioral score. A genotype × early alcohol exposure interaction shows behavioral under-responsivity to tactile stimuli in monkeys carrying the short (s) rh5-HTTLPR allele compared to middle-to-late exposed and controls regardless of genotype.
Figure 2(A–D) Correlations of DA-ergic parameters measured with PET and mean sensory scores in (A) control, (B) early gestation, (C) middle-to-late gestation, and (D) continuous prenatal alcohol-exposed monkeys. This figure illustrates a significant difference in correlations across groups (p < 0.05): r = 0.87 p < 0.01 for (B) early gestation prenatal alcohol-exposed monkeys compared to r = −0.728, p < 0.10 for (C) middle-to-late gestation exposed monkeys. Closed circles represent monkeys carrying the short (s) allele and open circles are monkeys with the l/l allele.