Association between a catechol-o-methyltransferase polymorphism and obsessive-compulsive disorder in the Afrikaner population. |
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Authors: | D J Niehaus C J Kinnear V A Corfield P L du Toit J van Kradenburg J C Moolman-Smook J B Weyers A Potgieter S Seedat R A Emsley J A Knowles P A Brink D J Stein |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychiatry, University of Stellenbosch, Tygerberg, South Africa. |
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Abstract: | BACKGROUND: It has been proposed that the catechol-o-methyl transferase gene (COMT) may play a role in the pathogenesis of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Whereas studies in a North American population showed that the low activity (L) allele of a functional polymorphism in COMT was associated with OCD in male patients, this result was not supported by studies in a Japanese population. The present association study assessed the risk for OCD conferred by this COMT polymorphism in a geographically different patient group, namely, the relatively genetically homogeneous Afrikaner population of South Africa. METHODS: Fifty-four unrelated OCD patients and fifty-four sex-matched controls were recruited from the same Afrikaner community. Patients and controls were phenotyped (DSM-IV) and genotyped for a NlaIII polymorphism with H (high activity) or L (low activity) alleles in the COMT gene. RESULTS: The H/L genotype was significantly more common than expected in the OCD patient group (P = 0.0017). LIMITATIONS: Replication studies with related individuals may be useful in discovering factors underpinning the H/L genotype abundance in the Afrikaner population. CONCLUSIONS: These results emphasise the need for further studies in genetically homogeneous populations to help define the complex etiology of this disease. |
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