Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University, PO Box 980126, Richmond, VA 23298-0126, USA.
Child Dev. 2011 Nov-Dec;82(6):1797-814. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2011.01640.x. Epub 2011 Aug 29.
The present study characterized prototypical patterns of development in self-reported externalizing behavior, between 12 and 22 years of age, within a community sample of 452 genotyped individuals. A Caucasian subset (n = 378) was then examined to determine whether their probabilities of displaying discrete trajectories were differentially associated with CHRM2, a gene implicated in self-regulatory processes across a range of externalizing behaviors, and if affiliating with antisocial peers moderated these associations. Findings indicate that relative to a normative "lower risk" externalizing trajectory, likelihood of membership in two "higher risk" trajectories increased with each additional copy of the minor allelic variant at CHRM2, and that this association was exacerbated among those exposed to higher levels of peer group antisocial behavior.
本研究在一个由 452 名基因分型个体组成的社区样本中,从 12 岁到 22 岁之间,描述了自我报告的外显行为的典型发展模式。然后,检查了一个白人群体(n = 378),以确定他们显示离散轨迹的概率是否与 CHRM2 不同相关,CHRM2 是一个涉及一系列外显行为的自我调节过程的基因,以及与反社会同伴的交往是否会调节这些关联。研究结果表明,与正常的“低风险”外显轨迹相比,CHRM2 中的次要等位基因变体每增加一个拷贝,属于两个“高风险”轨迹的可能性就会增加,而在那些接触到更高水平的同伴反社会行为的人中,这种关联更为严重。