Common variants in the TPH1 and TPH2 regions are not associated with persistent ADHD in a combined sample of 1,636 adult cases and 1,923 controls from four European populations.
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Publication year
2010Author(s)
Source
American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part B : Neuropsychiatric Genetics, 153B, 5, (2010), pp. 1008-15ISSN
Annotation
01 juli 2010
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Psychiatry
Health Evidence
Urology
Cognitive Neuroscience
Human Genetics
Former Organization
Epidemiology, Biostatistics & HTA
Journal title
American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part B : Neuropsychiatric Genetics
Volume
vol. 153B
Issue
iss. 5
Page start
p. 1008
Page end
p. 15
Subject
DCN 1: Perception and Action; DCN 2: Functional Neurogenomics; IGMD 3: Genomic disorders and inherited multi-system disorders; NCEBP 1: Molecular epidemiology; NCEBP 2: Evaluation of complex medical interventions; NCEBP 9: Mental Health; ONCOL 5: Aetiology, screening and detectionAbstract
The tryptophan hydroxylase 1 and 2 (TPH1 and TPH2) genes encode the rate-limiting enzymes in the serotonin biosynthesis. Genetic variants in both genes have been implicated in several psychiatric disorders. For attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children, the results are conflicting, and little is known about their role in adult ADHD patients. We therefore first genotype-tagged all common variants within both genes in a Norwegian sample of 451 patients with a diagnosis of adult ADHD and 584 controls. Six of the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were subsequently genotyped in three additional independent European Caucasian samples of adult ADHD cases and controls from the International Multicenter persistent ADHD Collaboration (IMpACT). None of the SNPs reached formal study-wide significance in the total meta-analysis sample of 1,636 cases and 1,923 controls, despite having a power of >80% to detect a variant conferring an OR = 1.25 at P = 0.001 level. Only the TPH1 SNP rs17794760 showed nominal significance [OR = 0.84 (0.71-1.00), P = 0.05]. In conclusion, in the single largest ADHD genetic study of TPH1 and TPH2 variants presented to date (n = 3,559 individuals), we did not find consistent evidence for a substantial effect of common genetic variants on persistent ADHD.
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- Academic publications [243984]
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- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92811]
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