Radboud University Nijmegen, Behavioural Science Institute, the Netherlands.
Department of Biological Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2018 Jun 7;20(7):836-842. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntx121.
Classical twin studies show that smoking is heritable. To determine if shared family environment plays a role in addition to genetic factors, and if they interact (G×E), we use a children-of-twins design. In a second sample, we measure genetic influence with polygenic risk scores (PRS) and environmental influence with a question on exposure to smoking during childhood.
Data on smoking initiation were available for 723 children of 712 twins from the Netherlands Twin Register (64.9% female, median birth year 1985). Children were grouped in ascending order of risk, based on smoking status and zygosity of their twin-parent and his/her co-twin: never smoking twin-parent with a never smoking co-twin; never smoking twin-parent with a smoking dizygotic co-twin; never smoking twin-parent with a smoking monozygotic co-twin; and smoking twin-parent with a smoking or never smoking co-twin. For 4072 participants from the Netherlands Twin Register (67.3% female, median birth year 1973), PRS for smoking were computed and smoking initiation, smoking heaviness, and exposure to smoking during childhood were available.
Patterns of smoking initiation in the four group children-of-twins design suggested shared familial influences in addition to genetic factors. PRS for ever smoking were associated with smoking initiation in all individuals. PRS for smoking heaviness were associated with smoking heaviness in individuals exposed to smoking during childhood, but not in non-exposed individuals.
Shared family environment influences smoking, over and above genetic factors. Genetic risk of smoking heaviness was only important for individuals exposed to smoking during childhood, versus those not exposed (G×E).
This study adds to the very few existing children-of-twins (CoT) studies on smoking and combines a CoT design with a second research design that utilizes polygenic risk scores and data on exposure to smoking during childhood. The results show that shared family environment affects smoking behavior over and above genetic factors. There was also evidence for gene-environment interaction (G×E) such that genetic risk of heavy versus light smoking was only important for individuals who were also exposed to (second-hand) smoking during childhood. Together, these findings give additional incentive to recommending parents not to expose their children to cigarette smoking.
经典的双胞胎研究表明,吸烟具有遗传性。为了确定除遗传因素外,共享家庭环境是否起作用,以及它们是否相互作用(G×E),我们使用双胞胎子女设计。在第二个样本中,我们使用多基因风险评分(PRS)来衡量遗传影响,并用一个关于儿童时期吸烟暴露的问题来衡量环境影响。
荷兰双胞胎登记处(NTR)提供了 712 对双胞胎中 723 名儿童的吸烟起始数据(64.9%为女性,中位出生年份为 1985 年)。根据双胞胎父母及其同卵双胞胎的吸烟状况和二倍体性,将儿童按风险升序分组:从不吸烟的双胞胎父母和从不吸烟的同卵双胞胎;从不吸烟的双胞胎父母和吸烟的二倍体同卵双胞胎;从不吸烟的双胞胎父母和吸烟的同卵双胞胎;以及吸烟的双胞胎父母和吸烟或从不吸烟的同卵双胞胎。对于来自荷兰双胞胎登记处(67.3%为女性,中位出生年份为 1973 年)的 4072 名参与者,计算了吸烟的PRS,并获得了吸烟起始、吸烟量和儿童时期吸烟暴露情况。
在四组双胞胎子女设计中,儿童的吸烟起始模式表明,除遗传因素外,还存在共享的家庭影响。终生吸烟的PRS 与所有个体的吸烟起始相关。在儿童时期暴露于吸烟的个体中,吸烟量的PRS 与吸烟量相关,但在未暴露于吸烟的个体中不相关。
共享家庭环境会影响吸烟,超过遗传因素。只有在儿童时期暴露于吸烟的个体中,而不是在未暴露于吸烟的个体中,吸烟量的遗传风险才与 G×E 相关。
本研究增加了为数不多的关于吸烟的双胞胎子女(CoT)研究,并将 CoT 设计与利用多基因风险评分和儿童时期吸烟暴露数据的第二个研究设计相结合。结果表明,共享家庭环境对吸烟行为的影响超过遗传因素。也有基因-环境相互作用(G×E)的证据,即重度与轻度吸烟的遗传风险仅对那些在儿童时期也暴露于(二手)吸烟的个体重要。综上所述,这些发现进一步促使人们建议父母不要让孩子接触香烟。