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AVPR1a and SLC6A4 Gene Polymorphisms Are Associated with Creative Dance Performance

Dancing, which is integrally related to music, likely has its origins close to the birth of Homo sapiens, and throughout our history, dancing has been universally practiced in all societies. We hypothesized that there are differences among individuals in aptitude, propensity, and need for dancing th...

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Autores principales: Bachner-Melman, Rachel, Dina, Christian, Zohar, Ada H, Constantini, Naama, Lerer, Elad, Hoch, Sarah, Sella, Sarah, Nemanov, Lubov, Gritsenko, Inga, Lichtenberg, Pesach, Granot, Roni, Ebstein, Richard P
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1239939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16205790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0010042
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author Bachner-Melman, Rachel
Dina, Christian
Zohar, Ada H
Constantini, Naama
Lerer, Elad
Hoch, Sarah
Sella, Sarah
Nemanov, Lubov
Gritsenko, Inga
Lichtenberg, Pesach
Granot, Roni
Ebstein, Richard P
author_facet Bachner-Melman, Rachel
Dina, Christian
Zohar, Ada H
Constantini, Naama
Lerer, Elad
Hoch, Sarah
Sella, Sarah
Nemanov, Lubov
Gritsenko, Inga
Lichtenberg, Pesach
Granot, Roni
Ebstein, Richard P
author_sort Bachner-Melman, Rachel
collection PubMed
description Dancing, which is integrally related to music, likely has its origins close to the birth of Homo sapiens, and throughout our history, dancing has been universally practiced in all societies. We hypothesized that there are differences among individuals in aptitude, propensity, and need for dancing that may partially be based on differences in common genetic polymorphisms. Identifying such differences may lead to an understanding of the neurobiological basis of one of mankind's most universal and appealing behavioral traits—dancing. In the current study, 85 current performing dancers and their parents were genotyped for the serotonin transporter (SLC6A4: promoter region HTTLPR and intron 2 VNTR) and the arginine vasopressin receptor 1a (AVPR1a: promoter microsatellites RS1 and RS3). We also genotyped 91 competitive athletes and a group of nondancers/nonathletes (n = 872 subjects from 414 families). Dancers scored higher on the Tellegen Absorption Scale, a questionnaire that correlates positively with spirituality and altered states of consciousness, as well as the Reward Dependence factor in Cloninger's Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire, a measure of need for social contact and openness to communication. Highly significant differences in AVPR1a haplotype frequencies (RS1 and RS3), especially when conditional on both SLC6A4 polymorphisms (HTTLPR and VNTR), were observed between dancers and athletes using the UNPHASED program package (Cocaphase: likelihood ratio test [LRS] = 89.23, p = 0.000044). Similar results were obtained when dancers were compared to nondancers/nonathletes (Cocaphase: LRS = 92.76, p = 0.000024). These results were confirmed using a robust family-based test (Tdtphase: LRS = 46.64, p = 0.010). Association was also observed between Tellegen Absorption Scale scores and AVPR1a (Qtdtphase: global chi-square = 26.53, p = 0.047), SLC6A4 haplotypes (Qtdtphase: chi-square = 2.363, p = 0.018), and AVPR1a conditional on SCL6A4 (Tdtphase: LRS = 250.44, p = 0.011). Similarly, significant association was observed between Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire Reward Dependence scores and AVPR1a RS1 (chi-square = 20.16, p = 0.01). Two-locus analysis (RS1 and RS3 conditional on HTTLPR and VNTR) was highly significant (LRS = 162.95, p = 0.001). Promoter repeat regions in the AVPR1a gene have been robustly demonstrated to play a role in molding a range of social behaviors in many vertebrates and, more recently, in humans. Additionally, serotonergic neurotransmission in some human studies appears to mediate human religious and spiritual experiences. We therefore hypothesize that the association between AVPR1a and SLC6A4 reflects the social communication, courtship, and spiritual facets of the dancing phenotype rather than other aspects of this complex phenotype, such as sensorimotor integration.
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spelling pubmed-12399392005-10-04 AVPR1a and SLC6A4 Gene Polymorphisms Are Associated with Creative Dance Performance Bachner-Melman, Rachel Dina, Christian Zohar, Ada H Constantini, Naama Lerer, Elad Hoch, Sarah Sella, Sarah Nemanov, Lubov Gritsenko, Inga Lichtenberg, Pesach Granot, Roni Ebstein, Richard P PLoS Genet Research Article Dancing, which is integrally related to music, likely has its origins close to the birth of Homo sapiens, and throughout our history, dancing has been universally practiced in all societies. We hypothesized that there are differences among individuals in aptitude, propensity, and need for dancing that may partially be based on differences in common genetic polymorphisms. Identifying such differences may lead to an understanding of the neurobiological basis of one of mankind's most universal and appealing behavioral traits—dancing. In the current study, 85 current performing dancers and their parents were genotyped for the serotonin transporter (SLC6A4: promoter region HTTLPR and intron 2 VNTR) and the arginine vasopressin receptor 1a (AVPR1a: promoter microsatellites RS1 and RS3). We also genotyped 91 competitive athletes and a group of nondancers/nonathletes (n = 872 subjects from 414 families). Dancers scored higher on the Tellegen Absorption Scale, a questionnaire that correlates positively with spirituality and altered states of consciousness, as well as the Reward Dependence factor in Cloninger's Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire, a measure of need for social contact and openness to communication. Highly significant differences in AVPR1a haplotype frequencies (RS1 and RS3), especially when conditional on both SLC6A4 polymorphisms (HTTLPR and VNTR), were observed between dancers and athletes using the UNPHASED program package (Cocaphase: likelihood ratio test [LRS] = 89.23, p = 0.000044). Similar results were obtained when dancers were compared to nondancers/nonathletes (Cocaphase: LRS = 92.76, p = 0.000024). These results were confirmed using a robust family-based test (Tdtphase: LRS = 46.64, p = 0.010). Association was also observed between Tellegen Absorption Scale scores and AVPR1a (Qtdtphase: global chi-square = 26.53, p = 0.047), SLC6A4 haplotypes (Qtdtphase: chi-square = 2.363, p = 0.018), and AVPR1a conditional on SCL6A4 (Tdtphase: LRS = 250.44, p = 0.011). Similarly, significant association was observed between Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire Reward Dependence scores and AVPR1a RS1 (chi-square = 20.16, p = 0.01). Two-locus analysis (RS1 and RS3 conditional on HTTLPR and VNTR) was highly significant (LRS = 162.95, p = 0.001). Promoter repeat regions in the AVPR1a gene have been robustly demonstrated to play a role in molding a range of social behaviors in many vertebrates and, more recently, in humans. Additionally, serotonergic neurotransmission in some human studies appears to mediate human religious and spiritual experiences. We therefore hypothesize that the association between AVPR1a and SLC6A4 reflects the social communication, courtship, and spiritual facets of the dancing phenotype rather than other aspects of this complex phenotype, such as sensorimotor integration. Public Library of Science 2005-09 2005-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC1239939/ /pubmed/16205790 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0010042 Text en Copyright: © 2005 Bachner-Melman et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bachner-Melman, Rachel
Dina, Christian
Zohar, Ada H
Constantini, Naama
Lerer, Elad
Hoch, Sarah
Sella, Sarah
Nemanov, Lubov
Gritsenko, Inga
Lichtenberg, Pesach
Granot, Roni
Ebstein, Richard P
AVPR1a and SLC6A4 Gene Polymorphisms Are Associated with Creative Dance Performance
title AVPR1a and SLC6A4 Gene Polymorphisms Are Associated with Creative Dance Performance
title_full AVPR1a and SLC6A4 Gene Polymorphisms Are Associated with Creative Dance Performance
title_fullStr AVPR1a and SLC6A4 Gene Polymorphisms Are Associated with Creative Dance Performance
title_full_unstemmed AVPR1a and SLC6A4 Gene Polymorphisms Are Associated with Creative Dance Performance
title_short AVPR1a and SLC6A4 Gene Polymorphisms Are Associated with Creative Dance Performance
title_sort avpr1a and slc6a4 gene polymorphisms are associated with creative dance performance
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1239939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16205790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0010042
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