Lack of Association between Polymorphisms of the Dopamine D<sub>4</sub> Receptor Gene and Personality
Author(s) -
Alexander Strobel,
Frank M. Spinath,
Alois Angleitner,
Rainer Riemann,
KlausPeter Lesch
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
neuropsychobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.71
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1423-0224
pISSN - 0302-282X
DOI - 10.1159/000068876
Subject(s) - novelty seeking , extraversion and introversion , psychology , exon , dopaminergic , genetic association , big five personality traits , personality , single nucleotide polymorphism , polymorphism (computer science) , genetics , dopamine , biology , gene , neuroscience , genotype , psychoanalysis
Recent studies have suggested a role of two polymorphisms of the dopamine D(4) receptor gene (DRD4 exon III and -521C/T) in the modulation of personality traits such as "novelty seeking" or "extraversion", which are supposed to be modulated by individual differences in dopaminergic function. However, several replication studies have not provided positive findings. The present study was performed to further investigate whether DRD4 exon III and -521C/T are associated with individual differences in personality. One hundred and fifteen healthy German volunteers completed the NEO-Five-Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI) and were genotyped for the two DRD4 polymorphisms. We found no association between DRD4 exon III and -521C/T, respectively, and estimated novelty seeking, NEO-FFI extraversion or other personality factors. Our findings are in line with several earlier studies which have failed to replicate the initial association results. Hence, our data do not provide evidence for a role of DRD4 exon III and the -521C/T polymorphism in the modulation of novelty seeking and extraversion.
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