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Oxytocin receptor gene variations and socio-emotional effects of MDMA: A pooled analysis of controlled studies in healthy subjects.

Patrick Vizeli, Matthias E Liechti

PLoS ONE April 13, 2019 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199384 via DOAJ

Summary

MDMA was found to significantly enhance feelings of trust in individuals with the rs1042778 TT genotype compared to those with G allele carriers, while no effects were observed for the other OXTR SNPs. In a pooled analysis of up to 132 healthy subjects, the genetic variants did not moderate MDMA's overall subjective effects or impairments in recognizing negative facial emotions. MDMA also increased plasma oxytocin levels, but these levels did not differ across OXTR gene variants.

Study at a glance

Design pooled analysis
Sample size 132
Population healthy subjects
Key finding The rs1042778 TT genotype showed significantly greater feelings of trust after MDMA administration compared to G allele carriers.

Abstract

Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) increases oxytocin, empathy, and prosociality. Oxytocin plays a critical role in emotion processing and social behavior and has been shown to mediate the prosocial effects of MDMA in animals. Genetic variants, such as single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), of the oxytocin receptor (OXTR) may influence the emotional and social effects of MDMA in humans. The effects of common genetic variants of the OXTR (rs53576, rs1042778, and rs2254298 SNPs) on the emotional, empathogenic, and prosocial effects of MDMA were characterized in up to 132 healthy subjects in a pooled analysis of eight double-blind, placebo-controlled studies. In a subset of 53 subjects, MDMA produced significantly greater feelings of trust in rs1042778 TT genotypes compared with G allele carriers. The rs53576 and rs225498 SNPs did not moderate the subjective effects of MDMA in up to 132 subjects. None of the SNPs moderated MDMA-induced impairments in negative facial emotion recognition or enhancements in emotional empathy in the Multifaceted Empathy Test in 69 subjects. MDMA significantly increased plasma oxytocin concentrations. MDMA and oxytocin concentrations did not differ between OXTR gene variants. The present results provide preliminary evidence that OXTR gene variations may modulate aspects of the prosocial subjective effects of MDMA in humans. However, interpretation should be cautious due to the small sample size. Additionally, OXTR SNPs did not moderate the subjective overall effect of MDMA (any drug effect) or feelings of "closeness to others".Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov, No: NCT00886886, NCT00990067, NCT01136278, NCT01270672, NCT01386177, NCT01465685, NCT01771874, and NCT01951508.

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