Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9189873 Clinical Neuroscience Research 2005 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
A research program at UC Irvine has investigated the molecular genetic basis of ADHD by focusing on one candidate gene (DRD4) and the highly variable 48 bp VNTR polymorphism in exon 3. Initial studies revealed that the 7R variant is over-represented in ADHD samples, and a subsequent study suggested that the 7R allele is associated with clear excesses in behavior but not with some cognitive deficits thought to be core feature of the disorder. The next phase of this research program showed that (1) the common 7R allele was the product of positive selection, (2) other variation in and around the DRD4 gene is in tight linkage disequilibrium with the 7R allele but not the 4R allele, and (3) more rare 7R variants in the ADHD clinical sample than expected. Based on this program of research, we suggest that the 7R VNTR variant is responsible for the observed association of the DRD4 gene with ADHD, and that a challenge for the future is understanding what other genetic and/or environmental factors influence this association and affect clinical outcome of the disorder.
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