No association or linkage between polymorphisms in the genes encoding cholecystokinin and the cholecystokinin B receptor and panic disorder

Growing animal data implicate cholecystokinin in the regulation of anxiety, while human clinical research confirms the role of cholecystokinin in the provocation of panic attacks. Antipanic medications suppress the ability of cholecystokinin to induce panic attacks, and may alter the expression of t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular psychiatry 2001, Vol.6 (1), p.59-65
Hauptverfasser: HAMILTON, S. P, SLAGER, S. L, HELLEBY, L, HEIMAN, G. A, KLEIN, D. F, HODGE, S. E, WEISSMAN, M. M, FYER, A. J, KNOWLES, J. A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Growing animal data implicate cholecystokinin in the regulation of anxiety, while human clinical research confirms the role of cholecystokinin in the provocation of panic attacks. Antipanic medications suppress the ability of cholecystokinin to induce panic attacks, and may alter the expression of the cholecystokinin gene. Thus, there is increased interest in understanding the molecular genetic component of these observations. Recent association studies using persons with panic disorder described some association between polymorphisms in the genes encoding cholecystokinin and the cholecystokinin B-receptor and panic disorder. In this study, we used a family-based design, employing 596 individuals in 70 panic disorder pedigrees, as well as 77 haplotype relative risk 'triads'. Subjects were genotyped for two polymorphisms: the polymorphic microsatellite marker in the CCK-BR locus using PCR-based genotyping and at a single nucleotide polymorphism in the CCK promoter using a fluorescence polarization detection assay, and the data were analyzed for genetic association and linkage. Employing a variety of diagnostic and genetic models, linkage analysis produced no significant lod scores at either locus. Family-based tests of association, the haplotype-based haplotype relative risk statistic and the transmission disequilibrium test, were likewise non-significant. The results reported here provide little support for the role of these polymorphisms in panic disorder.
ISSN:1359-4184
1476-5578
DOI:10.1038/sj.mp.4000788