Pharmacopsychiatry 2009; 42(4): 141-144
DOI: 10.1055/s-0028-1112132
Original Paper

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

COMT Val158Met Polymorphism is Associated with Cognitive Flexibility in a Signal Discrimination Task in Schizophrenia

A. H. Neuhaus 1 , C. Opgen-Rhein 1 , C. Urbanek 1 , E. Hahn 1 , T. M. T. Ta 1 , M. Seidelsohn 1 , S. Strathmann 1 , F. Kley 1 , N. Wieseke 1 , T. Sander 2 , M. Dettling 1
  • 1Department of Psychiatry, Charité University Medicine, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Berlin, Germany
  • 2Max-Delbrueck-Center for Molecular Medicine, Berlin, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

received 13.08.2008 revised 11.11.2008

accepted 13.11.2008

Publication Date:
07 July 2009 (online)

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Abstract

Background: Associations between the well-known functional single nucleotide polymorphism Val158Met in the gene encoding catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) and cognitive do-mains affected in schizophrenia are inconsistent regarding directionality and specific impact and call for a more fundamental cognitive endophenotype. Recent studies suggest that the COMT genotype contributes to cognitive flexibility, a fundamental cognitive ability that potentially influences an individual's performance in a variety of other neurocognitive tasks.

Methods: We investigated the association between COMT Val158Met genotype and cognitive flexibility as assessed by signal discrimination in the Continuous Performance Test – Identical Pairs version in a cohort of 111 German schizophrenic patients.

Results: COMT genotype was significantly associated with signal discrimination index d’ in schizophrenia. The Val/Val genotype was associated with the highest and the Met/Met genotype with the lowest scores; heterozygous individuals displayed an intermediate performance.

Conclusions: Our data suggest that allelic variation at the COMT Val158Met locus may influence signal discrimination capacity in schizophrenia and confirm that Val loading, probably due to decreased prefrontal dopamine availability, is associated with greater cognitive flexibility, which in turn may influence other cognitive measures that have been associated with COMT to date.

References

Correspondence

A. H. NeuhausMD 

Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy

Charité University Medicine Berlin

Campus Benjamin Franklin

Eschenallee 3

14050 Berlin

Germany

Phone: +49/30/8445 86 61

Fax: +49/30/8445 83 93

Email: andres.neuhaus@charite.de