Skip to main content
Full access
Brief Report
Published Online: 1 September 1999

Relationship Between a GABAAα6 Pro385Ser Substitution and Benzodiazepine Sensitivity

Publication: American Journal of Psychiatry

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In humans, interindividual variation in sensitivity to benzodiazepine drugs may correlate with behavioral variation, including vulnerability to disease states such as alcoholism. In the rat, variation in alcohol and benzodiazepine sensitivity has been correlated with an inherited variant of the GABAAa6 receptor. The authors detected a Pro385Ser [1236C>T] amino acid substitution in the human GABAAa6 that may influence alcohol sensitivity. In this pilot study, they evaluated the contribution of this polymorphism to benzodiazepine sensitivity. METHOD: Sensitivity to diazepam was assessed in 51 children of alcoholics by using two eye movement measures: peak saccadic velocity and average smooth pursuit gain. Association analysis was performed with saccadic velocity and smooth pursuit gain as dependent variables and comparing Pro385/Ser385 heterozygotes and Pro385/Pro385 homozygotes. RESULTS: The Pro385Ser genotype was associated with less diazepam-induced impairment of saccadic velocity but not with smooth pursuit gain. CONCLUSIONS: The Pro385Ser genotype may play a role in benzodiazepine sensitivity and conditions, such as alcoholism, that may be correlated with this trait.
Children of alcoholics are at higher risk for alcoholism (1); therefore, they have been the focus of studies on subjective, psychomotor, physiological, and biochemical responses to ethanol (2, 3). Previous studies of less sensitivity to benzodiazepine and ethanol in children of alcoholics than in comparison subjects have yielded conflicting results (47). The genetic and neurobiological mechanisms of diminished sensitivity to benzodiazepine and ethanol in children of alcoholics are unclear, probably because these drugs affect multiple neurotransmitter systems (8).
Recently, we detected a novel Pro385Ser amino acid substitution polymorphism of the GABAAα6 subunit gene (9). Frequency of the more rare Ser385 allele was approximately 0.04 in Finnish Caucasians. Although the substitution is nonconservative, no information was available on function. Cross-tolerance of benzodiazepine with ethanol and the efficacy of benzodiazepines in treating alcohol withdrawal suggest that GABAA receptors have a key role in alcohol’s effects. In a selective genotyping study (10), we found that the GABAAα6 genotype correlated with level of response to alcohol. Our aim in the current study was to evaluate the hypothesis that Pro385Ser is associated with differences in benzodiazepine sensitivity.

METHOD

We studied 51 unrelated Caucasian offspring of alcoholic fathers; 25 were sons, and 26 were daughters. Their mean age was 22.2 years (SD=2.0, range=18–25). Psychiatric disorders were diagnosed by using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R. The proband and at least one first-degree relative were interviewed with the Family Informant Schedule and Criteria (an extended version of the Family History Research Diagnostic Criteria) and with the Family History Assessment Module from the SSAGA (a structured diagnostic interview developed in the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism). Children of alcoholics were free of lifetime DSM-III-R axis I or axis II psychiatric or substance use disorders, except adjustment disorder.
The subjects were medically healthy and reported that they had taken no medication for at least 1 month and that they had not used a benzodiazepine more than once. All subjects gave written informed consent before participating in the study after all procedures and risks were explained. The study was approved by the University of Washington Institutional Review Board.
The subjects were tested on 2 days about 1 week apart. Intravenous catheters were inserted in an antecubital vein in each arm. One intravenous line was used for blood sampling for diazepam levels, and the contralateral arm was used for administration of diazepam or placebo. Infusions were given double-blind and in randomized order. On the diazepam day, the drug was administered at 15-minute intervals in four doses of 25, 25, 50, and 100 µg/kg, yielding logarithmically increasing cumulative doses of 25, 50, 100, and 200 µg/kg. On the placebo day, saline was injected in similar volumes and at the same times.
On each testing day, both eye movements and diazepam levels were measured at each of 12 time points: twice at baseline, once after each of the four doses, and six times at 30-minute intervals after the last dose. Peak saccadic eye movement velocity and average smooth pursuit eye movement gain were recorded by using a noninvasive infrared oculographic device (Eye Trac model 210, ASL Labo­ratories, Waltham, Mass.).
A 365-bp genomic DNA fragment was amplified with primers 5′-CTGACTCCAAATATCATCTG-3′ and 5′-GAGAAGCATCTACACAAGTC-3′ (primer annealing at 60°C) (9) and digested with Fok I, yielding two fragments 261 nt and 104 nt in size in the case of Ser385, as described elsewhere (9).
Sensitivity of saccadic eye movement velocity and smooth pursuit gain was measured both at baseline and after each of four diazepam doses. The baseline-dose differences were used to construct, by a trapezoidal technique, the area under the curve. The area under the curve for the dependent variable was then divided by the area under the curve for plasma diazepam levels to correct for individual variability in diazepam levels.
These area-under-the-curve ratios were compared between children of alcoholics with the Pro385/Pro385 homozygous genotype and the Pro385/Ser385 heterozygous genotype by using t tests. There were no Ser385/Ser385 homozygotes.

RESULTS

We observed an association between Pro385Ser genotype and average smooth pursuit eye movement gain after administration of intravenous diazepam (table 1). Children of alcoholics with the Ser385 allele were less sensitive to diazepam. There was no association with peak velocity of saccadic eye movement (t=0.73, df=48, p=0.82). The numbers of subjects used in the two analyses differ because one person was so sensitive to diazepam that data for saccadic velocity could not be collected at the highest diazepam dose.

DISCUSSION

Among the 13 subunits known to participate in the formation of GABAA/benzodiazepine receptor complexes in mammals (11), the α6 subunit is unique in its benzodiazepine-agonist-insensitive pharmacology and in its restricted distribution (12). GABAAα6 expression is limited to cerebellar granule cells. An enhanced potentiation of GABAA currents by diazepam binding to the receptor complex containing the Pro385 variant could underlie the differences in average smooth pursuit eye movement gain seen in subjects of different genotypes. The observation by Korpi et al. (13) that a rat GABAAα6 variant is involved in differential alcohol sensitivity and diazepam response of the receptor helped generate the hypothesis that a structural variant might be present in the human GABAAα6 that could affect sensitivity to these drugs. In a selective genotyping study (10), we have also found that level of response to alcohol in humans correlates with GABAAα6 genotype. Again, Pro385/Ser385 heterozygotes were less sensitive than Pro385/Pro385 homozygotes. Despite these converging lines of evidence supporting support a role for genetic variation in GABAAα6 in alcoholism and diazepam sensitivity, alteration of GABAAα6 function by the human Pro385Ser variant has not been demonstrated. However, this is the first indication that a difference in human diazepam response may arise from a naturally occurring variant in a GABAA receptor subunit.
We did not find any association between Pro385Ser and saccadic eye movement. Saccadic eye movements are mediated by the parietal cortex and the frontal cortex and through associated connections with the basal ganglia as well as the superior colliculus and, finally, premotor areas in the pons. Meanwhile, and consistent with the narrow localization of GABAAα6 to the cerebellum, the smooth pursuit eye movements that were associated with the Pro385Ser genotype are predominantly mediated by the cerebellum, as well as other cortical areas (14). Therefore, the association of Pro385Ser to pursuit eye movements but not to saccadic movements corresponds to the restricted expression of GABAAα6 to the cerebellum.
TABLE 1

Footnote

Received May 21, 1998; revision received March 9, 1999; accepted April 13, 1999. From the Laboratory of Neurogenetics, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Bethesda, Md., and the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington and Harborview Medical Center, Seattle. Address reprint requests to Dr. Nakao Iwata, Department of Psychiatry, Fujita Health University School of Medicine, Toyoake, Aichi 470-11, Japan; [email protected] (e-mail). Supported in part by National Institute on Alcohol and Alcohol Abuse grant AA-09635 (Dr. Cowley). The authors thank Roger L. Vallejo for his comments and Longina Akhtar, Linda Floyd, and Barbara Ricker for their assistance.

References

1.
Cloninger CR, Bohman M, Sigvardsson S: Inheritance of alcohol abuse: cross-fostering analysis of adopted men. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1981; 38:861–868
2.
Schuckit MA: Reactions to alcohol in sons of alcoholics and controls. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 1988; 12:465–470
3.
Pollock VE: Meta-analysis of subjective sensitivity to alcohol in sons of alcoholics. Am J Psychiatry 1992; 149:1534–1538
4.
Ciraulo DA, Barnhill JG, Ciraulo AM, Greenblatt DJ, Shader RI: Parental alcoholism as a risk factor in benzodiazepine abuse: a pilot study. Am J Psychiatry 1989; 146:1333–1335
5.
Schuckit MA, Duthie LA, Mahler HI, Irwin M, Monteiro MG: Subjective feelings and changes in body sway following diazepam in sons of alcoholics and control subjects. J Stud Alcohol 1991; 52:601–608
6.
Cowley DS, Roy-Byrne PP, Godon C, Greenblatt DJ, Ries R, Walker RD, Samson HH, Hommer DW: Response to diazepam in sons of alcoholics. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 1992; 16:1057–1063
7.
Cowley DS, Roy-Byrne PP, Radant A, Hommer DW, Green­blatt DJ, Vitaliano PP, Godon C: Eye movement effects of diazepam in sons of alcoholic fathers and male control subjects. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 1994; 18:324–332
8.
Deitrich RA, Dunwiddie TV, Harris RA, Erwin VG: Mechanism of action of ethanol: initial central nervous system actions. Pharmacol Rev 1989; 41:489–537
9.
Iwata N, Cowley DS, Radel M, Floyd L, Ricker B, Roy-Byrne PP, Ozaki N, Goldman D: GABAA α6 polymorphisms and relationship to benzodiazepine sensitivity (abstract). Biol Psychiatry Suppl 1999; 45:82S
10.
Schuckit MA, Mazzanti C, Smith TL, Ahmed U, Radel M, Iwata N, Goldman D: Selective genotyping for the role of 5-HT2A, 5-HT2C, and GABA alpha 6 receptors and the serotonin transporter in the level of response to alcohol: a pilot study. Biol Psychiatry 1999; 45:647–651
11.
Burt DR, Kamatchi GL: GABAA receptor subtypes: from pharmacology to molecular biology. FASEB J 1991; 5:2916–2923
12.
Luddens H, Pritchett DB, Kohler M, Killisch I, Keinanen K, Monyer H, Sprengel R, Seeburg PH: Cerebellar GABAA receptor selective for a behavioural alcohol antagonist. Nature 1990; 346:648–651
13.
Korpi ER, Kleingoor C, Kettenmann H, Seeburg PH: Benzodiazepine-induced motor impairment linked to point mutation in cerebellar GABAA receptor. Nature 1993; 361:356–359
14.
Leigh R, Zee D: The Neurology of Eye Movement. Philadelphia, FA Davis, 1991

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 1447 - 1449
PubMed: 10484961

History

Published online: 1 September 1999
Published in print: September 1999

Authors

Affiliations

Nakao Iwata, M.D., Ph.D.
Deborah S. Cowley, M.D.
Peter P. Roy-Byrne, M.D.

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Export Citations

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

For more information or tips please see 'Downloading to a citation manager' in the Help menu.

Format
Citation style
Style
Copy to clipboard

There are no citations for this item

View Options

View options

PDF/ePub

View PDF/ePub

Get Access

Login options

Already a subscriber? Access your subscription through your login credentials or your institution for full access to this article.

Personal login Institutional Login Open Athens login
Purchase Options

Purchase this article to access the full text.

PPV Articles - American Journal of Psychiatry

PPV Articles - American Journal of Psychiatry

Not a subscriber?

Subscribe Now / Learn More

PsychiatryOnline subscription options offer access to the DSM-5-TR® library, books, journals, CME, and patient resources. This all-in-one virtual library provides psychiatrists and mental health professionals with key resources for diagnosis, treatment, research, and professional development.

Need more help? PsychiatryOnline Customer Service may be reached by emailing [email protected] or by calling 800-368-5777 (in the U.S.) or 703-907-7322 (outside the U.S.).

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Share article link

Share