About 15% of one-year-old infants in non-clinical, lowrisk and up to 80% in high-risk (eg maltreated) populations show extensive disorganized attachment behavior 1,2 in the Strange Situation Test. 3 It has also been reported that disorganization of early attachment is a major risk factor for the development of childhood behavior problems. 4 The collapse of organized attachment strategy has been explained primarily by inappropriate caregiving, but recently, the contribution of child factors such as neurological impairment 5 and neonatal behavioral organization 6 has also been suggested. Here we report an association between the DRD4 III exon 48-bp repeat polymorphism and attachment disorganization. Attachment behavior of 90 infants was tested in the Strange Situation and they were independently genotyped for the number of the 48-bp repeats by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The 7-repeat allele was represented with a significantly higher frequency in infants classified as disorganized compared to non-disorganized infants: 12 of 17 (71%) vs 21 of 73 (29%) had at least one 7-repeat allele ( 2 = 8.66, df = 1, P Ͻ 0.005). The estimated relative risk for disorganized attachment among children carrying the 7-repeat allele was 4.15. We suggest that, in non-clinical, low-social-risk populations, having a 7-repeat allele predisposes infants to attachment disorganization. Molecular Psychiatry (2000) 5, 633-637.The first publications on association between DRD4 receptor III exon polymorphism and the adult personality trait, Novelty Seeking, 7,8 were soon followed by reports demonstrating associations of the same polymorphism with pathological impulsive, compulsive behavior and substance abuse in adults 9-11 and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children. 12,13 There is a growing body of evidence linking maladaptive behavioral problems in children (and extending into adulthood) with the 7-repeat allele of the DRD4 gene.Early attachment between infant and caregiver has been considered essential for survival in the human species. 14 Attachment theory provided a widely used framework for explaining influences of early social experiences on normal and problematic development of personality. 15 Ainsworth and colleagues 3 devised an experimental procedure, the Strange Situation, and described marked individual differences in infants' coping with the stress elicited by the two brief separations from the caregiver. The three basic, coherently organized patterns of infant behavior after reunion (secure, insecure-avoidant, insecure-resistant, see Methods) have been regarded as adaptations to the experienced differences in caregiving. 16 About 15% of infants in non-clinical, low-risk and up to 80% in highsocial-risk (eg maltreated) populations were difficult to fit in the three established categories. These 'atypical' infants showed incoherent, contradictory behavior in the presence of the caregiver as if their behavioral strategy collapsed under the stress of the Strange Situation. A new organizational dimension of at...
Effects of DRD4 and 5-HTTLPR length polymorphisms have been reported on neonatal and infant temperament as well as adult personality traits. The 7-repeat form of the DRD4 III exon VNTR polymorphism has been associated with childhood ADHD, and recently we have reported its link with attachment disorganization in a nonclinical population of infants. Here, we report associations of these polymorphisms with infant temperament at 12 months of age. Maternal accounts of temperament and observed response to novelty were investigated for 90 infants, who were independently genotyped for the DRD4 III exon, and for 5-HTT-linked promoter region length polymorphisms. Maternal rating of temperament was not affected by these polymorphisms, but we found combined genotype effects for infants' observed responses to a novel, anxiety-provoking stimulus: the appearance of, and approach by, a stranger. Infants with at least one copy of both the 7-repeat DRD4 allele and the long variant of 5-HTTLPR (7 + , l/l&l/s) responded with significantly less anxiety than infants with other genotypes. However, infants with the 7-repeat DRD4 allele and homozygous for the short form of 5-HTTLPR (7 + , s/s) showed more anxiety and resistance to the stranger's initiation of interaction. These genotype effects were not redundant with the previously reported association between the 7-repeat DRD4 allele and disorganized attachment behavior. Although both temperament and attachment behavior were affected by the DRD4 repeat polymorphism, the effect on temperament measures was modified by the infants' 5-HTTLPR genotype. Molecular Psychiatry (2003) 8, 90-97.
Disorganized attachment is an early predictor of the development of psychopathology in childhood and adolescence. Lyons-Ruth et al. (1999) developed the AMBIANCE coding scheme to assess disrupted communication between mother and infant, and reported the link between maternal behavior and disorganized attachment. The Hungarian group found an association between a polymorphism of the DRD4 gene and disorganized attachment (Lakatos et al., 2000;Gervai et al., 2005). The present collaborative work investigated the interplay between genetic and caregiving contributions to disorganized attachment. 138 mother-infant dyads, 96 from a Hungarian low-social-risk sample and 42 from a US high-social-risk sample, were assessed for infant disorganized attachment behavior, for DRD4 gene polymorphisms, and for disrupted forms of maternal affective communication with the infant. In accord with literature reports, we found a robust main effect of maternal AMBIANCE scores on infant disorganization. However, this relation held only for the majority of infants who carried the short form of the DRD4 allele. Among carriers of the 7-repeat DRD4 allele, there was no relation between quality of maternal communication and infant disorganization. This interaction effect was independent of degree of social risk and maternal DRD4 genotype.
To examine emotional face processing in mothers of different attachment representations, event-related potentials were recorded from 16 mothers during presentation of infant emotion faces with positive, negative or neutral emotional expressions within a three-stimulus oddball paradigm, and frontal asymmetries were assessed. Insecure mothers, as compared to secure ones, showed a more pronounced negativity in the face-sensitive N170 component and a smaller N200 amplitude. Regarding the P300 component, secure mothers showed a stronger response to face stimuli than insecure mothers. No differences were found for frontal asymmetry scores. The results indicate that attachment differences may be related to neuropsychological functioning.
Keywords: DRD4 exon III VNTR polymorphism; −521 C/T promoter polymorphism; attachment disorganization; dopamineIn non-clinical low-risk populations 15% of infants show disorganized attachment behavior 1,2 with their caregivers in the Strange Situation, 3 a mildly stressful laboratory procedure testing infants' ability to cope with separation anxiety. Disorganization of early attachment has been primarily ascribed to inadequate parenting, 2,4,5 and has been associated with childhood behavior problems 6,7 and adolescent psychopathological tendencies. 5We have recently reported an association between the DRD4 exon III 48 basepair repeat polymorphism and disorganization of infants' attachment behavior towards their mother in a low-social-risk group of 1-year-old infants: 8 the risk for disorganized attachment among infants carrying the 7-repeat allele was fourfold. Here we report further evidence for the involvement of the dopamine D4 receptor gene in attachment disorganization. The same group of infants was genotyped for the functional −521 C/T single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the upstream regulatory region of the DRD4 gene 9 in order to test the association with attachment disorganization both alone and in interaction with the DRD4 exon III 7-repeat allele. While the −521 C/T genotype itself had no effect on attachment status ( 2 = 0.41, df = 2, P = 0.82), there was an interaction between the structural 48-bp repeat polymorphism and the −521 C/T promoter polymorphism: the association between disorganized attachment and the 7-repeat allele was enhanced in the presence of the −521 T allele ( 2 = 6.61 and 6.67, df = 1, P Ͻ 0.025 for CT and TT genotypes, respectively). In the presence of both risk alleles the odds ratio for disorganized attachment increased tenfold. This result supports our previous postulation that the DRD4 gene plays a role in the development of attachment behavior in low-risk, non-clinical populations. Molecular Psychiatry (2002) 7, 27-31. DOI: 10.1038/ sj/mp/4000986The role of dopamine receptor and transporter genes in both normal traits and psychopathology has been intensively studied in the past decade.10,11 One of the most frequently targeted candidate genes is the highly polymorphic dopamine D4 receptor (DRD4) gene. 12,13A 48-bp VNTR polymorphism has been identified in exon III with the 4-repeat allele being the most common, followed by the 7-repeat form 14 which is 2-3 times less potent in dopamine-mediated coupling to adenylyl cyclase than the 4-repeat form.15 Evidence linking the 7-repeat allele of the DRD4 gene with infant temperament traits of negative emotionality [16][17][18] and maladaptive behavioral problems, especially attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children, is being accumulated. 19-21Recently, we found that the 7-repeat DRD4 allele was 2.5 times more frequent among one-year-old infants who showed disorganized attachment behavior, ie were unable to cope with the stress elicited by the two brief separations from the caregiver in the Strange Situation exper...
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