Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (
oxytocin
)
15,767
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The neurohormone
oxytocin
plays a central role in human social behaviour and cognition, and
oxytocin
dysregulation may contribute to psychiatric disorders. However, genetic factors influencing individual variation in the oxytocinergic system remain poorly understood. We genotyped 169 healthy adults for a functional polymorphism in
GTF2I
(
general transcription factor II-I
), a gene associated with high prosociality and reduced social anxiety in Williams syndrome, a condition reported to involve high
oxytocin
levels and reactivity. Participants' salivary
oxytocin
levels were measured before and after watching a validated empathy-inducing video.
Oxytocin
reactivity, defined as pre- to post-video percentage change in salivary
oxytocin
, varied substantially and significantly between individuals with different
GTF2I
genotypes, with, additionally, a trend towards an interaction between genotype and sex. Individuals with more
oxytocin
-reactive genotypes also reported significantly lower social anxiety. These findings suggest a model whereby
GTF2I
has a continuum of effects on human sociality, from the extreme social phenotypes and
oxytocin
dysregulation associated with gene deletion in Williams syndrome, to individual differences in
oxytocin
reactivity and sociality associated with common polymorphisms in healthy populations.
...
PMID:The Williams syndrome prosociality gene
GTF2I
mediates oxytocin reactivity and social anxiety in a healthy population. 2842 17
We describe and evaluate an integrative hypothesis for helping to explain the major neurocognitive features of individuals with Williams syndrome region deletions and duplications. First, we demonstrate how the cognitive differences between Williams syndrome individuals, individuals with duplications of this region, and healthy individuals parallel the differences between individuals subject to effects of increased or decreased
oxytocin
. Second, we synthesize evidence showing that variation in expression of the gene
GTF2I
(General Transcription Factor II-I) underlies the primary social phenotypes of Williams syndrome and that common genetic variation in
GTF2I
mediates
oxytocin
reactivity, and its correlates, in healthy populations. Third, we describe findings relevant to the hypothesis that the
GTF2I
gene is subject to parent of origin effects whose behavioral expression fits with predictions from the kinship theory of genomic imprinting. Fourth, we describe how Williams syndrome can be considered, in part, as an autistic syndrome of Lorna Wing's 'active-but-odd' autism subtype, in contrast to associations of duplications with both schizophrenia and autism.
...
PMID:Williams syndrome deletions and duplications: Genetic windows to understanding anxiety, sociality, autism, and schizophrenia. 2849 4