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The DRD2 TaqI polymorphism and symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Author(s) -
David C. Rowe,
Edwin J. C. G. van den Oord,
C Stever,
L N Giedinghagen,
Jaime M.C. Gard,
H. Harrington Cleveland,
Michael S. Gilson,
Susan Terris,
Jennifer Mohr,
Stephanie L. Sherman,
Ann Abramowitz,
Irwin D. Waldman
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
molecular psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.071
H-Index - 213
eISSN - 1476-5578
pISSN - 1359-4184
DOI - 10.1038/sj.mp.4000567
Subject(s) - attention deficit hyperactivity disorder , heritability , taqi , psychology , population , allele , genotype , psychiatry , medicine , clinical psychology , polymorphism (computer science) , genetics , environmental health , gene , biology
The relationship of the DRD2 TaqI-A1 allele to hyperactive/impulsive and inattentive symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children and adolescents was examined in a sample of clinic-referred children and their siblings, and control children and their siblings (n = 236). The contribution of genetic dominance and additivity to mean differences among the A2A2, A1A2, and A1A1 genotypes was estimated using structural equation modeling. The effect of genetic additivity was statistically significant for both traits in an analysis of all children. The heritability from the DRD2 locus was estimated at 4.27% for hyperactive-impulsive symptoms and 2.12% for inattentive symptoms. Children with the A2A2 genotype had the highest mean level of symptoms. To control for any possible effects of population stratification, this analysis was repeated with parental genotypes as controls. In this smaller sample, although the direction of the effect was the same as that in the whole sample, the genotypic differences failed to reach conventional significance levels and the effect sizes were smaller (h2 = 1.62% and 0.79%, respectively). Furthermore, a genotype relative risk test of children who had questionnaire-based diagnoses of ADHD also failed to yield evidence of either association or linkage. Given that the A1 allele was expected to be the high risk allele, and that results were non-significant in tests that controlled for population heterogeneity, we doubt that this DRD2 polymorphism influences symptoms of ADHD in childhood.

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