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MAOA GENE VARIANT HELPS PROTECT
AGAINST EFFECTS OF EARLY ABUSE
Many people who are abused or neglected as children grow up to be
criminals or abusers themselves. Many others, however, go on to become
highly successful, and never exhibit aggressive tendencies. A new study
suggests that the difference between the two groups lies in their genetic
makeup.
Avshalom Caspi and colleagues analyzed data from 442 New Zealand
male adults involved in a long-term study. The researchers identified 154
subjects who were abused or maltreated as children, including 33 who
were severely abused.
The researchers then evaluated the influence of a particular gene on
the abused children's outcomes as adults. A "low activity" variant of this
gene-which affects levels of monoamine oxidase A (MAOA), an
enzyme that metabolizes the brain chemicals serotonin, dopamine, and
norepinephrine-has previously been linked to abnormal aggression
(see related article, Crime Times, 1995, Vol. 1, No. 3, Page 1).
Caspi et al. discovered that 85 percent of severely abused subjects
with the low-activity variant of the MAOA gene developed some form of
antisocial behavior. In contrast, study participants with the high-activity
variant only rarely exhibited aggressive or criminal behavior in
adulthood even if they had been severely abused as children.
"Although individuals having the combination of low-activity MAOA
genotype and maltreatment were only 12 percent of the male birth
cohort," the researchers say, "they accounted for 44 percent of the
cohort's violent convictions."
Says study co-leader Terrie Moffitt, "The combination of the low-
activity MAOA genotype and maltreatment predicts antisocial behaviors
as well as high cholesterol predicts heart disease." Richie Poulton, also a
study co-author, says, "These findings may explain why not all victims
of maltreatment grow up to victimize others. It is possible that some
genes may promote resistance to stress and trauma."
Poulton also notes that the MAOA gene investigated in their study is
found on the X chromosome, and that females have two copies of this
chromosome while males have only one. Thus, women are much more
likely to carry at least one copy of the protective variant of the MAOA
gene. "This might help explain," Poulton says, "why severe antisocial
behavior is more common among men than women."
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"Role of genotype in the cycle of violence in maltreated children," A.
Caspi, J. McClay, T. E. Moffitt, J. Mill, J. Martin, I. W. Craig, A. Taylor,
and R. Poulton, Science, Vol. 297, No. 5582, August 2002, 851-
4. Address: Terrie Moffitt, Medical Research Council, Social, Genetic,
and Developmental Psychiatry Research Centre, Institute of Psychiatry,
King's College, London SE5 8AF, UK
-- and --
"Criminality linked to early abuse and genes," New Scientist,
August 1, 2002.
-- and --
"Gene that prevents male violence discovered by Otago researchers,"
press release, University of Otago, August 2, 2002.
-- and --
"Violent effects of abuse tied to gene," Daily inScight, August
1, 2002.
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