Allelic variants of the functional promoter polymorphism of the human serotonin transporter gene is associated with auditory cortical stimulus processing.

  • Jürgen Gallinat
  • Daniel Senkowski
  • Catrin Wernicke
  • Georg Juckel
  • Isabell Becker
  • Thomas Sander
  • Michael Smolka
  • Ulrich Hegerl
  • Hans Rommelspacher
  • Georg Winterer
  • Werner M Herrmann

Abstract

The loudness dependence (LD) of the auditory-evoked N1/P2 component has been shown to be related to the central serotonergic neurotransmission. Allelic variants in the promoter region of the 5-hydroxytryptamine transporter (5-HTT) gene were shown to modulate serotonergic activity. It was hypothesized that the three genotypes (l/l, s/l, s/s) differ with respect to LD. Allelic variants of the 5-HTT promoter region and LD at the Cz electrode were determined in 185 healthy subjects prospectively. A significant association was found between LD and genotype (ANOVA: F=4.172, p=0.017). Individuals homozygous for the l allele exhibited a weaker LD compared to heterozygous subjects. The results are consistent with the reported association between 5-HTT genotype and serotonin transport capacity in lymphoblasts, and indicate that auditory stimulus processing is associated with genetic variants of the brain serotonergic system. The LD may serve as endophenotype in human serotonin research.

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number3
ISSN0893-133X
Publication statusPublished - 2003
pubmed 12629533