Journal article
FMRI activation during response inhibition and error processing: The role of the DAT1 gene in typically developing adolescents and those diagnosed with ADHD
W Braet, KA Johnson, CT Tobin, R Acheson, C McDonnell, Z Hawi, E Barry, A Mulligan, M Gill, MA Bellgrove, IH Robertson, H Garavan
Neuropsychologia | Published : 2011
Abstract
The DAT1 gene codes for the dopamine transporter, which clears dopamine from the synaptic cleft, and a variant of this gene has previously been associated with compromised response inhibition in both healthy and clinical populations. This variant has also been associated with ADHD, a disorder that is characterised by disturbed dopamine function as well as problems with response inhibition. In the present study we used fMRI to investigate the role of dopaminergic genetic variation on executive functioning by comparing how activation associated with successful and unsuccessful inhibitions differs based on DAT1-genotype and ADHD-diagnosis in adolescents performing a go/nogo task. The results id..
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Funding Acknowledgements
This study was supported by grants from the Science Foundation Ireland, the Irish Health Research Board, the Irish Higher Education Authority's Programme for Research in Third-Level Institutions, the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Howard Florey Centenary Fellowship, and the FWO Research Foundation - Flanders. Data-analysis was performed on computers of the Trinity Centre for High Performance Computing. The authors would like to thank all participants, as well as their parents.