| Literature DB >> 26401290 |
Thomas Dresler1, Beatrix Barth2, Thomas Ethofer3, Klaus-Peter Lesch4, Ann-Christine Ehlis3, Andreas J Fallgatter5.
Abstract
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common, early-onset and enduring developmental disorder whose underlying etiological and neurobiological processes are the current focus of major research. Research strategies have made considerable effort in elucidating the complex genetic architecture of ADHD and indicate various pathways from genotype to phenotype. Understanding ADHD as a neuropsychiatric disorder enabled to investigate markers of neural activity as endophenotypes to better explain the link from gene to symptomatology (the so-called imaging genetics approach). Overcoming the originally rather restrictive requirements for an endophenotype, imaging genetics studies are supposed to offer a much more flexible and hypothesis-driven approach towards the etiology of ADHD. Although 1) ADHD often persists into adulthood, thus remaining a prevalent disorder, and 2) imaging genetics provides a promising research approach, a review on imaging genetics in adult ADHD - as available for childhood ADHD (Durston 2010) - is lacking. In this review, therefore, findings from the few available imaging genetics studies in adult ADHD will be summarized and complemented by relevant findings from healthy controls and children with ADHD that are considered important for the adult ADHD imaging genetics approach. The studies will be reviewed regarding implications for basic research and possible practical applications. Imaging genetics studies in adult ADHD have the potential to further clarify pathophysiological pathways and mechanisms, to derive new testable hypotheses, to investigate genetic interaction effects and to partly influence practical applications. In combination with other research strategies, they can incrementally foster the understanding of relevant processes in a more comprehensive way. Current limitations comprise the incapability to discover new genes, a high genetic load in patients potentially obscuring the effect of single candidate genes, the mostly unknown heritability of the endophenotype and the heterogeneous manifestation of ADHD.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26401290 PMCID: PMC4574388 DOI: 10.1186/2051-6673-1-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Borderline Personal Disord Emot Dysregul ISSN: 2051-6673
Studies on imaging genetics in adult ADHD
| Authors | Participants | Paradigm | Gene variant | Imaging | Imaging genetics results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baehne et al. [ | 124 patients | Go/NoGo task (CPT) | TPH2 (G-allele polymorphism in rs4570625, T-allele polymorphism in rs11178997) | EEG (NGA) | Reduced NGA in risk allele carriers in ADHD and healthy controls |
| 84 controls | |||||
| Dresler et al. [ | 161 patients | Go/NoGo task (CPT) | SLC6A3 (3′ UTR VNTR) | EEG (NGA) | Reduced NGA in 9-repeat allele carriers in the patients, no influence in healthy controls |
| 109 controls | |||||
| Fallgatter et al. [ | 216 patients | Go/NoGo task (CPT) | LPHN3 | EEG (NGA) | Reduced NGA in the LPHN3 high risk group |
| Heinzel et al. [ | 181 patients | Go/NoGo task (CPT) | COMT (Val158Met), DRD4 (exon 3 VNTR) | EEG (NGA) | Significant DRD4 × COMT interaction on NGA (DRD4 no7R: inverted u-shape with increasing COMT-dependent DA levels, DRD4 7R: u-shape), no gene main effects, no interaction with group |
| 114 controls | |||||
| Brown et al. [ | 52 patients | Working memory (n-back) | SLC6A3 (3′ UTR VNTR) | fMRI | Marginal reduced left mePFC signal in 9-repeat allele carriers in patients and controls, marginal genotype-by-diagnosis interaction in the SMA/dACC (increased activation in 10-repeat allele homozygous patients vs. controls) |
| 38 controls | |||||
| Brown et al. [ | 42 patients | Multi-source interference task | SLC6A3 (3′ UTR VNTR) | fMRI | Hypoactivation in 9-repeat allele homozygous patients in the left dACC |
| Hoogman et al. [ | 63 patients | Delay discounting task | NOS1 exon 1f-VNTR | fMRI | SS-allele carriers demonstrate higher ventral striatum activity in patients |
| 41 controls | |||||
| Hoogman et al. [ | 87 patients | Delay discounting task | SLC6A3 (3′UTR VNTR/intron 8 VNTR haplotype) | fMRI | No significant effects of DAT1 haplotype on striatal activity |
| 77 controls |
CPT, continuous performance test; DA, dopamine; dACC, dorsal anterior cingulate cortex; EEG, electroencephalography; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; mePFC, medial prefrontal cortex; NGA, NoGo-anteriorisation; SMA, supplementary motor area; UTR, untranslated region; VNTR, variable number of tandem repeats.
Effects of gene variants
| Gene variant | Gene product | Gene product function | Influence of variant | Primary brain regions of action | Physiologic effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
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| COMT (Val158Met) | Catechol-o-methyltransferase | Degradation of catecholamines | Met variant- carriers have reduced COMT activity | Prefrontal Cortex | Differential dopaminergic signaling influences PFC function (COMT-genotype model), may explain different drug effects [ |
| DRD4 (exon 3 VNTR) | Dopamine receptor D4 | Dopaminergic transmission | 7R-carriers have reduced DRD4 function | Prefrontal Cortex | Variation in dopaminergic signaling influences PFC function, interaction with other genotypes [ |
| SLC6A3 (3′UTR VNTR); SLC6A3 (3′UTR VNTR/intron 8 VNTR haplotype) | Dopamine transporter | Reuptake of dopamine | 9R- vs. 10R-carriers have reduced or increased DAT availability (inconsistent findings) | Striatum | Variability of striatal dopamine Transporter availability influences PFC function directly or indirectly via cortico-striatal pathways [ |
|
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| TPH2 (e.g. rs4570625, rs11178997) | Tryptophan hydroxylase 2 | Synthesis of serotonin | Influences transcriptional activity | Raphe nuclei, with ubiquitous action of serotonin | Differential activity of the cortico-limbic circuit |
|
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| NOS1 exon 1f-VNTR | Neuronal nitric oxide (NO) synthase | Synthesis of neuronal NO | Allelic variation in reporter gene expression | Striatum | NO function influences dopamine signaling [ |
| LPHN3 (ADHD risk haplotype) | Latrophilin | Adhesion G-protein coupled receptor (?) | Decreased NAA/Cr ratio in risk haplotype carriers | Amygdala, caudate nucleus, cerebellum, and cerebral cortex | Possibly influences dopamine-glutamatergic system interaction |
COMT, Catechol-o-methyltransferase; DAT, dopamine transporter; NAA/Cr, N-acetyl aspartate/creatine; NO, nitric oxide; PFC, prefrontal cortex; UTR, untranslated region; VNTR, variable number of tandem repeats.