Abstract

Schizophrenia is an acute mental disorder with an undefined etiology. Its high heritability suggests that several genetic variants and polymorphisms may contribute to the severity and emergence of its symptoms. Former molecular evidence has shed some light on the association of serotonergic pathway genetic polymorphisms with schizophrenia. This study aimed to investigate the association between schizophrenia and two SNPs from one haplotype block, which lies in the 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2A (5-HTR2A)gene in the Iranian population. Blood samples were collected from one-hundred and fifty-two patients diagnosed with schizophrenia and one-hundred and fifty-eight cases of the healthy control, who were matched in terms of age and gender. The participants were genotyped for rs6311 and rs6313 using PCR-RFLP. R programming language and Haploview software were respectively leveraged for statistical and haplotype inferencing. The results showed that there was no significant association between rs6313 and schizophrenia. However, the rs6311 T allele was independently associated with schizophrenia, and it was significantly associated with SCZ in an rs6311-rs6313 haplotype. Moreover, the general linear model confirmed the potential predictor role of rs6311 for schizophrenia and the C allele of rs6313 demonstrated a higher frequency among females compared to males. The findings of this study indicated the association of rs6311 and rs6311-rs6313 haplotype with schizophrenia in the Iranian population and also suggested a potential schizophrenia risk predictor role for rs6311.

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