Carr Katelyn A, Lin Henry, Fletcher Kelly D, Sucheston Lara, Singh Prashant K, Salis Robbert J, Erbe Richard W, Faith Myles S, Allison David B, Stice Eric, Epstein Leonard H
Department of Pediatrics, University at Buffalo, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Buffalo, NY 14214-3000, USA.
Behav Neurosci. 2013 Jun;127(3):387-99. doi: 10.1037/a0032026. Epub 2013 Apr 1.
Food reinforcement, or the motivation to eat, has been associated with increased energy intake, greater body weight, and prospective weight gain. Much of the previous research on the reinforcing value of food has focused on the role of dopamine, but it may be worthwhile to examine genetic polymorphisms in the serotonin and opioid systems as these neurotransmitters have been shown to be related to reinforcement processes and to influence energy intake. We examined the relationship among 44 candidate genetic polymorphisms in the dopamine, serotonin, and opioid systems, as well as food reinforcement and body mass index (BMI) in a sample of 245 individuals. Polymorphisms in the monoamine oxidase A (MAOA-LPR) and serotonin receptor 2A genes (rs6314) moderated the effect of food reinforcement on BMI, accounting for an additional 5-10% variance and revealed a potential role of the single nucleotide polymorphism, rs6314, in the serotonin 2A receptor as a differential susceptibility factor for obesity. Differential susceptibility describes a factor that can confer either risk or protection depending on a second variable, such that rs6314 is predictive of both high and low BMI based on the level of food reinforcement, while the diathesis stress or dual-gain model only influences one end of the outcome measure. The interaction with MAOA-LPR better fits the diathesis stress model, with the 3.5R/4R allele conferring protection for individuals low in food reinforcement. These results provide new insight into genes theoretically involved in obesity, and support the hypothesis that genetics moderate the association between food reinforcement and BMI.
食物强化,即进食动机,与能量摄入增加、体重增加以及预期的体重增长有关。此前关于食物强化价值的许多研究都集中在多巴胺的作用上,但研究血清素和阿片类系统中的基因多态性可能是值得的,因为这些神经递质已被证明与强化过程有关,并会影响能量摄入。我们在245名个体的样本中研究了多巴胺、血清素和阿片类系统中44种候选基因多态性之间的关系,以及食物强化与体重指数(BMI)之间的关系。单胺氧化酶A(MAOA-LPR)和血清素受体2A基因(rs6314)的多态性调节了食物强化对BMI的影响,解释了另外5%-10%的变异,并揭示了单核苷酸多态性rs6314在血清素2A受体中作为肥胖易感性差异因素的潜在作用。易感性差异描述的是一种根据第二个变量既可以带来风险也可以提供保护的因素,因此rs6314根据食物强化水平可预测高BMI和低BMI,而素质应激或双重获益模型只影响结果测量的一端。与MAOA-LPR的相互作用更符合素质应激模型,3.5R/4R等位基因对食物强化程度低的个体具有保护作用。这些结果为理论上与肥胖相关的基因提供了新的见解,并支持了基因调节食物强化与BMI之间关联的假设。