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Human mu-opioid receptor variation and alcohol dependence
Authors:T Sander  N Gscheidel  B Wendel  J Samochowiec  M Smolka  H Rommelspacher  LG Schmidt  MR Hoehe
Affiliation:Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital Benjamin Franklin, Free University of Berlin, Germany.
Abstract:Mu-Opioid receptor-mediated neurotransmission is involved in the reward, tolerance, and withdrawal effects of alcohol. The present association study tested the hypothesis that the common Asn40Asp substitution polymorphism in the N-terminal domain of the human mu-opioid receptor (OPRM) confers vulnerability to subtypes of alcohol dependence. The genotypes of the Asn40Asp substitution polymorphism were assessed in 327 German alcohol-dependent subjects (according to ICD-10) and in 340 control subjects of German descent, using an assay based on allele-specific polymerase chain reaction. To select alcoholics with a presumed high genetic load, three subgroups were delineated, marked by (1) a family history of parental alcoholism (n = 114); (2) the inability to abstain from alcohol before the age of 26 years (n = 73); and (3) a history of alcohol withdrawal seizure or delirium (n = 107). The frequency of the Asp40 allele did not differ significantly between the controls f(Asp40) = 0.078] and either the entire group of alcoholics f(Asp40) = 0.107; p = 0.066], or the alcoholics with parental alcoholism f(Asp40) = 0.114; p = 0.094], or the early-onset alcoholics f(Asp40) = 0.096; p = 0.471, or the alcoholics with severe withdrawal symptoms f(Asp40) = 0.098; p = 0.350]. Our results do not provide evidence that the common Asn40Asp substitution polymorphism of the OPRM gene contributes a major effect to the pathogenesis of alcohol dependence.
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