World J Biol Psychiatry
July 2000
Recurrent panic attacks, anticipatory anxiety and phobic avoidance characterise panic disorder. The influence of genetic factors on liability to the disease has been the object of several linkage and association studies and appears to relate to an oligo- or polygenic rather than a monogenic mode of inheritance. Recently, an excess of high activity monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A) gene promoter alleles was found in female patients with panic disorder.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe human PAX7 gene is a member of the paired box containing gene family of transcription factors implicated in development of the skeletal muscle of the trunk and limbs as well as elements of the central nervous system. To understand the molecular mechanisms involved in its expression, we have localized the transcription start sites in adult skeletal muscle and functionally characterized the 5'-flanking regulatory region responsible for PAX7 expression in this tissue. The major transcription start was identified 664 bp upstream from the ATG codon using primer extension and 5'-rapid amplification of cDNA ends (5'-RACE).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neural Transm (Vienna)
May 2002
The serotonin transporter (5HTT) is the molecule responsible for the high-affinity reuptake of 5HT from the synaptic cleft. Mice lacking the 5HTT exhibit highly elevated extracellular concentrations of 5HT. We assessed whether the glutathione detoxification system is altered in 5HTT-deficient mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFunctional characterization studies revealed that transcriptional activity of the human monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) gene is modulated by a polymorphic repetitive sequence located approximately 1.2 kb upstream of the ATG codon. To investigate the possible influence of the allelic variants of the MAOA gene-linked polymorphic region (MAOA-LPR) on the genetic predisposition to psychiatric disorders, we have performed a case-control association study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRNA preparations synthesized in vitro were used to study the influence of RNA interference on the Kruppel gene activity in Drosophila embryos. RNA complementary in parallel orientation to the mRNA fragment proved to induce the development of Kruppel phenocopies. The data obtained indicate that mechanisms of specific regulation of gene activity exist in Drosophila cells, which are sensitive to the formation of both parallel and antiparallel RNA-RNA duplexes that include mRNA of the corresponding gene.
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