College of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306, USA.
Psychiatry Res. 2010 Jan 30;175(1-2):160-4. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2009.01.024. Epub 2009 Dec 9.
Gene x environment interactions have been found to be associated with the development of antisocial behaviors. The extant gene x environment research, however, has failed to measure directly the ways in which global measures of genetic risk may interact with a putative environmental risk factor. The current study addresses this gap in the literature and examines the interrelationships among a global measure of genetic risk based on five genetic polymorphisms, a measure of parent-child relations, and eight antisocial phenotypes. Analysis of African-American males (N = 145 to 159) drawn from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) revealed two broad findings. First, the genetic risk and parent-child relations scales were inconsistently related to the outcome variables. Second, genetic risk and parent-child relations interacted to predict variation in all of the eight antisocial phenotype measures. These findings point to the possibility that measures of genetic risk that are based on multiple polymorphisms can be employed to examine the gene x environmental basis to antisocial behavioral phenotypes.
基因与环境的相互作用与反社会行为的发展有关。然而,现有的基因与环境研究未能直接衡量遗传风险的全球指标可能与假定的环境风险因素相互作用的方式。本研究填补了这一文献空白,探讨了基于五个遗传多态性的遗传风险的全球指标、亲子关系的指标和八种反社会表型之间的相互关系。对来自国家青少年健康纵向研究(Add Health)的非洲裔美国男性(N = 145 至 159)的分析揭示了两个广泛的发现。首先,遗传风险和亲子关系量表与结果变量之间的关系不一致。其次,遗传风险和亲子关系相互作用,预测了所有八种反社会表型测量值的变化。这些发现表明,基于多个多态性的遗传风险测量值可用于研究反社会行为表型的基因与环境基础。