Predicting Sensation Seeking From Dopamine Genes

Author:

Derringer Jaime1,Krueger Robert F.1,Dick Danielle M.2,Saccone Scott3,Grucza Richard A.3,Agrawal Arpana3,Lin Peng3,Almasy Laura4,Edenberg Howard J.5,Foroud Tatiana5,Nurnberger John I.5,Hesselbrock Victor M.6,Kramer John R.7,Kuperman Samuel7,Porjesz Bernice8,Schuckit Marc A.9,Bierut Laura J.3,

Affiliation:

1. University of Minnesota

2. Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Richmond, Virginia

3. Washington University in St. Louis

4. Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research, San Antonio, Texas

5. Indiana University

6. University of Connecticut

7. University of Iowa

8. State University of New York Downstate Medical Center

9. University of California, San Diego

Abstract

Sensation seeking is a heritable personality trait that has been reliably linked to behavioral disorders. The dopamine system has been hypothesized to contribute to variations in sensation seeking between different individuals, and both experimental and observational studies in humans and nonhuman animals provide evidence for the involvement of the dopamine system in sensation-seeking behavior. In this study, we took a candidate-system approach to genetic association analysis of sensation-seeking behavior. We analyzed single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from a number of dopaminergic genes. Using 273 SNPs from eight dopamine genes in a sample of 635 unrelated individuals, we examined the aggregate effect of SNPs that were significantly associated with sensation-seeking behavior. Multiple SNPs in four dopamine genes accounted for significant variance in sensation-seeking behavior between individuals. These results suggest that multiple SNPs, aggregated within genes that are relevant to a specific neurobiological system, form a genetic-risk score that may explain a significant proportion of observed variance in human traits such as sensation-seeking behavior.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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