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COMT Val158Met genotype is associated with fluctuations in working memory performance: converging evidence from behavioural and single-trial P3b measures

Authors :
Stephan G. Boehm
Gayatri Salunkhe
Nikolaos Smyrnis
Ulrich Ettinger
I. Lourmpa
Maria Elena Stefanou
Bernd Feige
Christoph Klein
Monica Biscaldi
Thomas M. Lancaster
Christopher W. N. Saville
David Edmund Johannes Linden
Kiran Kumar Mantripragada
A. Nadkarni
Stephan Bender
Source :
NeuroImage. 100
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Intra-subject variability in reaction times (ISV) is a promising endophenotype for several psychiatric conditions, but its neural underpinnings are not yet established. Converging evidence from neuroimaging, molecular genetics, and psychopharmacology suggests that ISV could index catecholaminergically-mediated neural noise. The fine-grained temporal resolution of electroencephalography is ideal for investigating ISV, but only if potential neural correlates of ISV can be assessed in single trials. Based on evidence that ISV is associated with dopaminergic functioning, we apply a recently developed method of single-trial P3b analysis to investigate the association of COMT Val(158)Met genotype with measures of ISV on the behavioural and neural levels at different working memory loads. Greater number of Met alleles was associated with poorer and more intra-individually variable performance on the tasks, and greater latency jitter in single-trial P3bs. These converging results at the behavioural and neurophysiological levels confirm previous observations that prefrontal dopamine availability is associated with stability and accuracy of cognitive performance. Together with previous studies, these data imply pleiotropic cognitive effects of COMT genotype.

Details

ISSN :
10959572
Volume :
100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NeuroImage
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....86b81ebd296c0aaf7a2d6594123b2164