Using a Psychopharmacogenetic Approach To Identify the Pathways Through Which—and the People for Whom—Testosterone Promotes Aggression

Author:

Geniole Shawn N.12ORCID,Procyshyn Tanya L.3,Marley Nicole1,Ortiz Triana L.1,Bird Brian M.4,Marcellus Ashley L.1,Welker Keith M.5,Bonin Pierre L.6,Goldfarb Bernard6,Watson Neil V.4,Carré Justin M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Nipissing University

2. Department of Basic Psychological Research and Research Methods, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna

3. Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University

4. Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University

5. Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Boston

6. Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sudbury, Canada

Abstract

Little is known about the neurobiological pathways through which testosterone promotes aggression or about the people in whom this effect is observed. Using a psychopharmacogenetic approach, we found that testosterone increases aggression in men ( N = 308) with select personality profiles and that these effects are further enhanced among those with fewer cytosine-adenine-guanine (CAG) repeats in exon 1 of the androgen receptor (AR) gene, a polymorphism associated with increased AR efficiency. Testosterone’s effects were rapid (~30 min after administration) and mediated, in part, by subjective reward associated with aggression. Testosterone thus appears to promote human aggression through an AR-related mechanism and to have stronger effects in men with the select personality profiles because it more strongly upregulates the subjective pleasure they derive from aggression. Given other evidence that testosterone regulates reward through dopaminergic pathways, and that the sensitivity of such pathways is enhanced among individuals with the personality profiles we identified, our findings may also implicate dopaminergic processes in testosterone’s heterogeneous effects on aggression.

Funder

natural sciences and engineering research council of canada

Northern Ontario Heritage Fund Corporation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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