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Wiley Open Access, Genes, Brain and Behavior, 2(15), p. 209-220, 2016

DOI: 10.1111/gbb.12276

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Human fear acquisition deficits in relation to genetic variants of the corticotropin releasing hormone receptor 1 and the serotonin transporter - revisited

Journal article published in 2015 by I. Heitland ORCID, L. Groenink, J. M. van Gool, K. Domschke, A. Reif ORCID, J. M. P. Baas
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

We recently showed that a genetic polymorphism (rs878886) in the human corticotropin releasing hormone receptor 1 (CRHR1) is associated with reduced fear conditioned responses to a threat cue. This is a potentially important finding considering that the failure to acquire fear contingencies can leave an individual in a maladaptive state of more generalized anxiety. Consistent with that idea, the CRHR1-dependent fear acquisition deficit translated into heightened contextual anxiety when taking genetic variability within the serotonin transporter long polymorphic region (5-HTTLPR) into account. To replicate our previous findings, we conducted a replication study in 224 healthy medication-free human subjects using the exact same cue and context virtual reality fear conditioning procedure as in Heitland et al. (2013). In the replication study, consistent with the original findings, CRHR1 rs878886 G-allele carriers showed reduced acquisition of cue-specific fear conditioned responses compared to C/C homozygotes. Also, in this larger sample the cue acquisition deficit of G-allele carriers translated into heightened contextual anxiety, even independent of 5-HTT gene variation. In contrast to our earlier findings, there was an additional interaction effect of CRHR1 rs878886 and the triallelic 5-HTTLPR/rs25531 variant on cued fear acquisition. In summary, this study replicated the initially reported association of the CRHR1 rs878886 G-allele with cued fear acquisition deficits, albeit with a different pattern of results regarding the interaction with 5-HTT variation. This further supports the notion that the human corticotropin releasing hormone plays a role in the acquisition of fears.