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The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor alpha 4 subunit contains a functionally relevant SNP Haplotype

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Item Type:Article
Title:The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor alpha 4 subunit contains a functionally relevant SNP Haplotype
Creators Name:Eggert, M. and Winterer, G. and Wanischeck, M. and Hoda, J.C. and Bertrand, D. and Steinlein, O.
Abstract:BACKGROUND: Non-coding single nucleotide polymorphisms within the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor alpha 4 subunit gene (CHRNA4) are robustly associated with various neurological and behavioral phenotypes including schizophrenia, cognition and smoking. The most commonly associated polymorphisms are located in exon 5 and segregate as part of a haplotype. So far it is unknown if this haplotype is indeed functional, or if the observed associations are an indirect effect caused by linkage disequilibrium with not yet identified adjacent functional variants. We therefore analyzed the functional relevance of the exon 5 haplotype alleles. RESULTS: Using voltage clamp experiments we were able to show that the CHRNA4 haplotype alleles differ with respect to their functional effects on receptor sensitivity including reversal of receptor sensitivity between low and high acetylcholine concentrations. The results indicate that underlying mechanisms might include differences in codon usage bias and changes in mRNA stability. CONCLUSIONS: Our data demonstrate that the complementary alleles of the CHRNA4 exon 5 haplotype are functionally relevant, and might therefore be causative for the above mentioned associations.
Keywords:CHRNA4, Acetylcholine Receptor, ACh Sensitivity, Haplotype, mRNA Stability
Source:BMC Genetics
ISSN:1471-2156
Publisher:BioMed Central
Volume:16
Number:1
Page Range:46
Date:2 May 2015
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12863-015-0204-1
PubMed:View item in PubMed

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