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Study
Reveals Possible Genetic Risk For Fetal Alcohol Disorders
Friday, September 21, 2007
New research in
primates suggests that infants and children who carry a certain
gene variant may be more vulnerable to the ill effects of fetal
alcohol exposure.
Reported
online today (Sept. 21) in Biological Psychiatry, the findings
represent the first evidence of a genetic risk for fetal alcohol
spectrum disorder - a condition that is characterized by profound
mental retardation in its most severe form, but which is also
associated with deficits in learning, attention, memory and
impulse control.
By identifying a genetic marker
that might signal susceptibility to these more subtle fetal
alcohol-induced problems, the research fills a pressing need,
says Mary Schneider, the University of Wisconsin-Madison
professor of kinesiology and psychology who led the study.
"The big concern used to
be the link between fetal alcohol exposure and mental
retardation, but today there is increased concern over behavioral
problems in these children," says Schneider. "If this
genetic marker could provide a way of recognizing the most
vulnerable fetal alcohol-exposed children early in life, perhaps
we could help them to live more successful and satisfying lives."
The study's results may also
help to explain why some children of mothers who drink during
pregnancy suffer birth defects, while others seem to escape
unharmed.
"Children who are exposed
to alcohol because their mothers drank during pregnancy have
varying degrees of problems, and the same is true for monkeys who
are exposed to moderate levels of alcohol in utero," says
Schneider. "So we know there are other factors involved."
With colleagues at UW-Madison,
the University of Toronto and the National Institutes of Health,
Schneider investigated two forms of a gene called the serotonin
transporter gene promoter, which helps regulate the brain
chemical serotonin. Past studies of both people and primates
suggest that carriers of a short form of this gene are at
increased risk for depression, but only if they also experience
adverse life events.
To test whether the gene's
short form might also raise the risk of fetal alcohol-induced
problems, Schneider's team analyzed data from an ongoing,
long-term study into the impacts of moderate fetal alcohol
exposure on behavior and brain function in rhesus monkeys.
Although fetal alcohol syndrome was first recognized in children
of alcoholic mothers, attention has shifted in recent years to
moderate drinking because of its potential to affect many more
children, says Schneider.
"We know that 60 percent
of women of child-bearing age consume alcohol and more than 50
percent of pregnancies are unplanned," she says. "So it
doesn't take much to figure out that prenatal exposure to alcohol
- at least in the weeks before pregnancy is detected - is
substantial."
In line with this, the mother
monkeys in the study's experimental group consumed the equivalent
of just two alcoholic beverages five times a week during breeding
and pregnancy. After the infants were born, the scientists
recorded their irritability during a standard battery of
developmental tests, measured their reactivity to stress when
separated from their mothers at six months for weaning, and
determined whether they carried the short or long form of the
serotonin transporter gene promoter.
What the researchers found is
that fetal alcohol-exposed infants who carried a copy of the
short form were more irritable and reactive to stress than either
control group infants who weren't exposed to alcohol or those who
were exposed but had two copies of the gene's long form. Overall,
says Schneider, the results indicate a "substantial
interaction" between fetal alcohol exposure and genotype.
She and her colleagues are now
conducting additional studies to see if these findings fit a
larger pattern of fetal alcohol-induced problems as the monkeys
grow up. At the same time, extreme irritability and stress
responsiveness in infants can themselves lead to problems, she
says.
"If a baby is very
irritable and stress reactive, one of the things this can
interfere with is the caregiver-infant interaction," she
says. "In real life, negative events tend to cluster. So if
there's alcohol in the environment, there may also be stress. And
then if you have an irritable baby, this all could have cascading
effects on the child's psychological development."
Recognizing that complex
behaviors are seldom, if ever, governed by a single gene,
Schneider and her colleagues are also investigating other gene
alleles for their potential to interact with fetal-alcohol
exposure and put children at risk.
"Genetics by themselves
rarely tell us much, because life experiences may trigger the
actual effects of our genetic vulnerabilities," says
Schneider. "So the more knowledge we have about the ways
that genes interact with environmental factors, the more we can
envision interventions early in life to help a vulnerable child."
The study's other authors are
Gary Kraemer, University of Toronto-Mississauga; Colleen Moore,
UW-Madison; and Timothy Newman and Christina Barr, National
Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. The work was funded by
the National Institutes of Health and UW-Madison.
Source:
University of Wisconsin, Madison

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