4.4 Article

Specificity of the effect of a nicotinic receptor polymorphism on individual differences in visuospatial attention

Journal

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages 1611-1620

Publisher

MIT PRESS
DOI: 10.1162/089892905774597281

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Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [AG 19653, U01 AG019653, R01 AG019653] Funding Source: Medline

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Cortical neurotransmitter availability is known to exert domain-specific effects on cognitive performance. Hence, normal variation in genes with a role in neurotransmission may also have specific effects oil cognition. We tested this hypothesis by examining associations between polymorphisms in genes affecting cholinergic and nonadrenergic neurotransmission and individual differences in visuospatial attention. Healthy individuals were administered a cued visual search task which varied the size of precues to the location of a target letter embedded in a 15-letter array. Cues encompassed 1, 3, 9, or 15 letters. Search speed increased linearly with precue size, indicative of a spatial attentional scaling mechanism. The strength of attentional scaling increased progressively with the number of C alleles (0, 1, or 2) of the alpha-4 nicotinic receptor gene C1545T polymorphism (n = 104). No associsation was found for the dopamine beta hydroxylase gene G444A polymorphism (n = 135). These findings point to the specificity of genetic neuromodulation. Whereas variation in a gene linked to cholinergic transmission systematically modulated the ability to scale the focus of visuospatial attention, variation in a gene governing dopamine availability did not. The results show that normal variation in a gene controlling a nicotinic receptor makes a selective contribution to individual differences in visuospatial attention.

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