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      A quantitative-trait analysis of human plasma-dopamine beta-hydroxylase activity: evidence for a major functional polymorphism at the DBH locus.

      American Journal of Human Genetics
      Amino Acid Substitution, Analysis of Variance, DNA, chemistry, genetics, DNA Mutational Analysis, Dopamine beta-Hydroxylase, blood, metabolism, Gene Frequency, Genotype, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, Phenotype, Point Mutation, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Quantitative Trait, Heritable

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          Abstract

          Dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (D beta H) catalyzes the conversion of dopamine to norepinephrine and is released from sympathetic neurons into the circulation. Plasma-D beta H activity varies widely between individuals, and a subgroup of the population has very low activity levels. Mounting evidence suggests that the DBH structural gene is itself the major quantitative-trait locus (QTL) for plasma-D beta H activity, and a single unidentified polymorphism may account for a majority of the variation in activity levels. Through use of both sequencing-based mutational analysis of extreme phenotypes and genotype/phenotype correlations in samples from African American, European American (EA), and Japanese populations, we have identified a novel polymorphism (--1021C-->T), in the 5' flanking region of the DBH gene, that accounts for 35%--52% of the variation in plasma-D beta H activity in these populations. In EAs, homozygosity at the T allele predicted the very low D beta H-activity trait, and activity values in heterozygotes formed an intermediate distribution, indicating codominant inheritance. Our findings demonstrate that --1021C-->T is a major genetic marker for plasma-D beta H activity and provide new tools for investigation of the role of both D beta H and the DBH gene in human disease.

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