Kuo Sally I-Chun, Poore Holly E, Barr Peter B, Chirico Isabella S, Aliev Fazil, Bucholz Kathleen K, Chan Grace, Kamarajan Chella, Kramer John R, McCutcheon Vivia V, Plawecki Martin H, Dick Danielle M
Department of Psychiatry, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, Brooklyn, NY, USA.
Dev Psychopathol. 2022 Dec;34(5):1865-1875. doi: 10.1017/S0954579422000700. Epub 2022 Oct 6.
The purpose of this study was to examine possible pathways by which genetic risk associated with externalizing is transmitted in families. We used molecular data to disentangle the genetic and environmental pathways contributing to adolescent externalizing behavior in a sample of 1,111 adolescents (50% female; 719 European and 392 African ancestry) and their parents from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism. We found evidence for genetic nurture such that parental externalizing polygenic scores were associated with adolescent externalizing behavior, over and above the effect of adolescents' own externalizing polygenic scores. Mediation analysis indicated that parental externalizing psychopathology partly explained the effect of parental genotype on children's externalizing behavior. We also found evidence for evocative gene-environment correlation, whereby adolescent externalizing polygenic scores were associated with lower parent-child communication, less parent-child closeness, and lower parental knowledge, controlling for parental genotype. These effects were observed among participants of European ancestry but not African ancestry, likely due to the limited predictive power of polygenic scores across ancestral background. These results demonstrate that in addition to genetic transmission, genes influence offspring behavior through the influence of parental genotypes on their children's environmental experiences, and the role of children's genotypes in shaping parent-child relationships.
本研究的目的是探究外化相关遗传风险在家庭中传递的可能途径。我们使用分子数据,在来自酒精中毒遗传学合作研究的1111名青少年(50%为女性;719名欧洲血统和392名非洲血统)及其父母的样本中,理清导致青少年外化行为的遗传和环境途径。我们发现了遗传教养的证据,即父母的外化多基因得分与青少年的外化行为相关,这超出了青少年自身外化多基因得分的影响。中介分析表明,父母的外化精神病理学部分解释了父母基因型对孩子外化行为的影响。我们还发现了唤起性基因 - 环境相关性的证据,即控制父母基因型后,青少年的外化多基因得分与较低的亲子沟通、较少的亲子亲密程度和较低的父母了解程度相关。这些效应在欧洲血统的参与者中观察到,但在非洲血统的参与者中未观察到,这可能是由于多基因得分在不同祖先背景下的预测能力有限。这些结果表明,除了遗传传递外,基因还通过父母基因型对孩子环境经历的影响以及孩子基因型在塑造亲子关系中的作用来影响后代行为。