Oxytocin receptor plays a key role in the ability to remember faces,
suggest findings. This research has important implications for disorders
in which social information processing is disrupted, including autism
spectrum disorder. In addition, the finding may lead to new strategies
for improving social cognition in several psychiatric disorders.
A team of researchers from Yerkes National
Primate Research Center at Emory University in Atlanta, the University
College London in the United Kingdom and University of Tampere in
Finland made the discovery, which will be published in an online Early
Edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. According to author Larry Young, PhD, of Yerkes, the Department of
Psychiatry in Emory's School of Medicine and Emory's Center for
Translational Social Neuroscience (CTSN), this is the first study to
demonstrate that variation in the oxytocin receptor gene influences face
recognition skills. He and co-author David Skuse point out the
implication that oxytocin plays an important role in promoting our
ability to recognize one another, yet about one-third of the population
possesses only the genetic variant that negatively impacts that ability.
They say this finding may help explain why a few people remember almost
everyone they have met while others have difficulty recognizing members
of their own family. Skuse is with the Institute of Child Health, University College London,
and the Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, NHS Foundation Trust,
London. Young, Skuse and their research team studied 198 families with a single
autistic child because these families were known to show a wide range of
variability in facial recognition skills; two-thirds of the families
were from the United Kingdom, and the remainder from Finland. The Emory researchers previously found the oxytocin receptor is
essential for olfactory-based social recognition in rodents, like mice
and voles, and wondered whether the same gene could also be involved in
human face recognition. They examined the influence of subtle
differences in oxytocin receptor gene structure on face memory
competence in the parents, non-autistic siblings and autistic child, and
discovered a single change in the DNA of the oxytocin receptor had a
big impact on face memory skills in the families. According to Young,
this finding implies that oxytocin likely plays an important role more
generally in social information processing, which is disrupted in
disorders such as autism. Additionally, this study is remarkable for its evolutionary aspect.
Rodents use odors for social recognition while humans use visual facial
cues. This suggests an ancient conservation in genetic and neural
architectures involved in social information processing that transcends
the sensory modalities used from mouse to man. Skuse credits Young's previous research that found mice with a mutated
oxytocin receptor failed to recognize mice they previously encountered.
"This led us to pursue more information about facial recognition and the
implications for disorders in which social information processing is
disrupted." Young adds the team will continue working together to pursue
strategies for improving social cognition in psychiatric disorders
based on the current findings.
Source:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Source:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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