Polymorphisms of the dopamine D-4 receptor and response to antipsychotic drugs

Citation
Bm. Cohen et al., Polymorphisms of the dopamine D-4 receptor and response to antipsychotic drugs, PSYCHOPHAR, 141(1), 1999, pp. 6-10
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences & Behavoir
Journal title
Volume
141
Issue
1
Year of publication
1999
Pages
6 - 10
Database
ISI
SICI code
Abstract
The dopamine D-4 receptor may be a site through which the clinical effects of antipsychotic drugs are mediated. Polymorphisms of a 48 base pair repeat in the third exon of the DRD4 gene code for different length segments in t he third intracytoplasmic loop of the D-4 receptor. The most common long (s even repeat) form of the D-4 receptor has been shown in both physiologic an d pharmacologic experiments to respond differently to dopamine agonists and antagonists than do shorter forms of D-4. Thus, variants of D-4 may partly determine patient response to antipsychotic drugs and, in particular, resp onse to typical neuroleptics, which have a relatively low affinity for the D-4 receptor, as compared to clozapine, which has a relatively high affinit y for D-4. DRD4 polymorphisms in the third intron were characterized in 28 patients with chronic psychosis who responded well to typical neuroleptics, 32 patients who responded well to clozapine, and 57 healthy comparison sub jects. Patients responding to typical neuroleptics carried the allele for t he long (seven repeat) form of the D-4 receptor (allele frequency 8.9 %) le ss frequently than patients responding to clozapine (allele frequency 23.4% , P = 0.046) or healthy comparison subjects (allele frequency 26.3%, P = 0. 004). The results of this study suggest that inherited variants of D-4 may explain some of the interindividual variation seen in patient response to d ifferent classes of antipsychotic medication.