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No significant association between SIRT1 gene and methamphetamine-induced psychosis in the Japanese population.

Authors :
Kishi T
Fukuo Y
Okochi T
Kitajima T
Ujike H
Inada T
Yamada M
Uchimura N
Sora I
Iyo M
Ozaki N
Correll CU
Iwata N
Source :
Human psychopharmacology [Hum Psychopharmacol] 2011 Oct; Vol. 26 (7), pp. 445-50. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Aug 31.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Objectives: We previously showed that the sirtuin 1 gene (SIRT1 gene), one of the clock genes, was associated with schizophrenia in a Japanese patient population. Because the symptoms of methamphetamine (METH)-induced psychosis are similar to those of paranoid type schizophrenia and because not every METH user develops psychosis, it is conceivable that METH-induced psychosis and schizophrenia have common susceptibility genes. Therefore, we conducted an analysis of the association of SIRT1 gene with METH-induced psychosis, hypothesizing a significant relationship.<br />Methods: This paper presents a case-control study of the SIRT1 gene in 515 Japanese individuals (197 with METH-induced psychosis and 318 age-matched and sex-matched controls) with four tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (rs12778366, rs2273773, rs4746720, and rs10997875), selected a priori using the HapMap database.<br />Results: rs10997875 (located in the 3' flanking region) was associated with METH-induced psychosis (unadjusted p(genotype)  = 0.0203). However, these results became non-significant after Bonferroni correction (corrected p(genotype)  = 0.0812). In the all-marker haplotype analysis, the SIRT1 gene was not associated with METH-induced psychosis (p = 0.146).<br />Conclusion: Our findings suggest that SIRT1 gene does not contribute to the development of METH-induced psychosis in the Japanese population. However, a replication study using larger samples should be conducted to obtain conclusive results.<br /> (Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1099-1077
Volume :
26
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Human psychopharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21882241
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/hup.1223