Publication | Open Access
A polymorphism in the norepinephrine transporter gene alters promoter activity and is associated with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
155
Citations
26
References
2006
Year
GeneticsNeurotransmitterHuman PolymorphismSocial SciencesAdhdTranscriptional RegulationAttention-deficit Hyperactivity DisorderPsychiatric GeneticsNeurogeneticsMolecular NeuroscienceMolecular PhysiologyPsychiatryBehavioral NeuroscienceNeuropharmacologyGenetic FactorSlc6a2 Promoter ActivityGene ExpressionTranscription RegulationDevelopmental BiologyGenetic DisorderGene RegulationNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryMolecular NeurobiologyCommon A/t PolymorphismMedicineNorepinephrine Transporter
The norepinephrine transporter critically regulates both neurotransmission and homeostasis of norepinephrine in the nervous system. In this study, we report a previously uncharacterized and common A/T polymorphism at -3081 upstream of the transcription initiation site of the human norepinephrine transporter gene [solute carrier family 6, member 2 (SLC6A2)]. Using both homologous and heterologous promoter-reporter constructs, we found that the -3081(T) allele significantly decreases promoter function compared with the A allele. Interestingly, this T allele creates a new palindromic E2-box motif that interacts with Slug and Scratch, neural-expressed transcriptional repressors binding to the E2-box motif. We also found that both Slug and Scratch repress the SLC6A2 promoter activity only when it contains the T allele. Finally, we observed a significant association between the -3081(A/T) polymorphism and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), suggesting that anomalous transcription factor-based repression of SLC6A2 may increase risk for the development of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and other neuropsychiatric diseases.
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