� Inborn  differences crataegus oxycantha help explain why psychic trauma gives some people bad memories and others the nightmare of post-traumatic stress. Scientists  in Germany  and the United  States  have reported evidence linking genes to uneasy behavior. The  findings appear in the August  issue of Behavioral  Neuroscience,  published by the American  Psychological  Association.  
By  showing that people world Health Organization carry a common variation of a gene that regulates the neurotransmitter dopastat have an exaggerated "start" reflex when viewing unpleasant pictures, the researchers extend a biochemical explanation for why some people observe it harder to influence emotional arousal. Their  sensitiveness may, in combination with other transmissible and environmental factors, make them more prone to anxiety disorders. 
Researchers  including Martin  Reuter,  PhD,  of the University  of Bonn,  Germany,  recruited 96 women averaging 22 years honest-to-god from the Giessen  Gene  Brain  Behavior  Project,  which investigates biomolecular causes of individual differences in behaviour. 
The  researchers first determined which participants carried which variations (alleles) of the COMT  factor, which encodes an enzyme that breaks down dopamine, weakening its signal. (COMT  stands for a katabolic enzyme named catechol-O-methyltransferase.)  Scientists  call its two alleles Val158  and Met158.  Depending  on ethnicity, more or less half the population carries one copy of each. The  rest of the population is roughly divided between carrying two copies of Val158  and two copies of Met158.  
Using  a well-validated psychophysiological measure, the researchers succeeding measured the intensity of each participant's startle reply by attaching electrodes to the oculus muscles that, upon emotional arousal, narrow and causal agency a flash. Participants  then viewed pictures that were emotionally pleasant (such as animals or babies), neutral (such as a office outlet or hairdryer), or aversive (such as weapons or injured victims at a law-breaking scene) -- 12 pictures of each type for six seconds each. A  loud, 35-millisecond white noise, called a startle probe, sounded at random spell they watched. When  participants blinked, exhibit the galvanize response, a bioamplifier took readings from the electrodes and sent the information to a computer for analysis. 
People  carrying iI copies of the Met158  allele of the COMT  gene showed a importantly stronger jump reflex in the unpleasant-picture condition than did carriers of either two copies of Val158  allele or one transcript of each. The  two-Met  carriers also disclosed greater anxiety on a standard personality quiz. 
This  finding confirms that specific variations in the gene that regulates dopamine signaling english hawthorn play a role in negative emotionalism. The  authors speculated that the Met158  allele may raise levels of circulating dopamine in the brain's limbic system, a set of structures that support (among other things) store, emotional arousal and attention. The  researchers said that more intropin in the prefrontal cortex could resultant role in an "inflexible attentional focus" on unpleasant stimuli, meaning that Met158  carriers can't pluck themselves away from something that's arousing -- fifty-fifty if it's bad. 
The  Met158  allele was created by a relatively recent mutation and only in the evolution of human beings. Other  primate species such as chimpanzees pack only the Val/Val  genetic constitution. Co-author  Christian  Montag,  Dipl.  Psych.,  observes that for humans, wariness may receive been adaptive. He  points out, "It  was an advantage to be more anxious in a dangerous environment." 
A  single gene variation, says Montag,  throne explain only a low portion of variation in anxious behaviour - differently, in theory, up to half the population could be anxious. 
"This  individual gene fluctuation is potentially only one of many factors influencing such a complex trait as anxiety," he says. "Still,  to identify the first candidates for genes associated with an anxiety-prone personality is a measure in the right instruction." 
Although  a great care more research is required, Montag  says that if this job of research bears fruit, one day "it might be possible to prescribe the right dose of the right drug, relation to genetical makeup, to treat anxiety disorders." 
"COMT  Genetic  Variation  Affects  Fear  Processing:  Psychophysiological  Evidence,"  Christian  Montag,  Dipl.  Psych.,  University  of Bonn;  Joshua  W.  Buckholtz,  MS,  Vanderbilt  University;  Peter  Hartmann,  PhD,  University  of Aarhus;  Michael  Merz,  Dipl.  Psych.,  Christian  Burk,  PhD,  and Juergen  Hennig,  PhD,  University  of Giessen;  and Martin  Reuter,  PhD,  University  of Bonn
Behavioral  Neuroscience,  Vol  122, No.  4. 
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