Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
909260 Journal of Anxiety Disorders 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We have analyzed, by gender, the association of MAOA-uVNTR polymorphism alleles with anxiety subtypes in a sample of adolescents.•High-activity variants of the MAOA-uVNTR polymorphism were associated with anxiety symptoms in girls.•Low-activity variants of the MAOA-uVNTR polymorphism were associated with social phobia symptoms in boys.

The polymorphism upstream of the gene for monoamine oxidase A (MAOA-uVNTR) is reported to be an important enzyme involved in human physiology and behavior. With a sample of 228 early-adolescents from a community sample (143 girls) and adjusting for environmental variables, we examined the influence of MAOA-uVNTR alleles on the scores obtained in the Screen for Childhood Anxiety and Related Emotional Disorders and in the Child Symptom Inventory-4. Our results showed that girls with the high-activity MAOA allele had higher scores for generalized and total anxiety than their low-activity peers, whereas boys with the low-activity allele had higher social phobia scores than boys with the high-activity allele. Results for conduct disorder symptoms did not show a significant relationship between the MAOA alleles and the presence of these symptoms. Our findings support a possible association, depending on gender, between the MAOA-uVNTR polymorphism and psychopathological disorders such as anxiety, which affects high rates of children and adolescents.

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