Rabinowitz Jill A, Thomas Nathaniel, Strickland Justin C, Meredith John J, Hung I-Tzu, Cupertino Renata B, Felton Julia W, Gelino Brett, Stone Bryant, Maher Brion S, Dick Danielle, Yi Richard, Flores-Ocampo Victor, García-Marín Luis M, Rentería Miguel E, Palmer Abraham A, Sanchez-Roige Sandra
Department of Psychiatry, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Genes Brain Behav. 2025 Apr;24(2):e70020. doi: 10.1111/gbb.70020.
Higher delay discounting (DD) (i.e., propensity to devalue larger, delayed rewards over immediate, smaller rewards) is a transdiagnostic marker underpinning multiple health behaviors. Although genetic influences account for some of the variability in DD among adults, less is known about the genetic contributors to DD among preadolescents. We examined whether polygenic scores (PGS) for DD, educational attainment, and behavioral traits (i.e., impulsivity, inhibition, and externalizing behavior) were associated with phenotypic DD among preadolescents. Participants included youth (N = 8982, 53% male) from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study who completed an Adjusting Delay Discounting Task at the 1-year follow-up and had valid genetic data. PGS for DD, educational attainment, impulsivity, inhibition, and externalizing behaviors were created based on the largest GWAS available. Separate linear mixed effects models were conducted in individuals most genetically similar to European (EUR; n = 4972), African (AFR; n = 1769), and Admixed American (AMR; n = 2241) reference panels. After adjusting for age, sex, income, and the top ten genetic ancestry principal components, greater PGS for DD and lower educational attainment (but not impulsivity, inhibition, or externalizing) were associated with higher rates of DD (i.e., preference for sooner, smaller rewards) in participants most genetically similar to EUR reference panels. Findings provide insight into the influence of genetic propensity for DD and educational attainment on the discounting tendencies of preadolescents, particularly those most genetically similar to European reference samples, thereby advancing our understanding of the etiology of choice behaviors in this population.
较高的延迟折扣(DD)(即相较于即时的小奖励,更倾向于贬低更大的延迟奖励的倾向)是一种支撑多种健康行为的跨诊断标志物。虽然遗传影响解释了成年人DD的部分变异性,但对于青春期前儿童DD的遗传贡献因素了解较少。我们研究了DD、教育程度和行为特征(即冲动性、抑制能力和外化行为)的多基因分数(PGS)是否与青春期前儿童的表型DD相关。参与者包括来自青少年大脑认知发展研究的青年(N = 8982,53%为男性),他们在1年随访时完成了调整延迟折扣任务并拥有有效的基因数据。基于现有的最大规模全基因组关联研究(GWAS)创建了DD、教育程度、冲动性、抑制能力和外化行为的PGS。在与欧洲(EUR;n = 4972)、非洲(AFR;n = 1769)和混血美国(AMR;n = 2241)参考面板基因相似度最高的个体中进行了单独的线性混合效应模型分析。在调整了年龄、性别、收入和前十个遗传血统主成分后,与EUR参考面板基因相似度最高的参与者中,较高的DD PGS和较低的教育程度(而非冲动性、抑制能力或外化行为)与较高的DD率(即偏好更快、更小的奖励)相关。研究结果为DD的遗传倾向和教育程度对青春期前儿童折扣倾向的影响提供了见解,特别是那些与欧洲参考样本基因相似度最高的儿童,从而推进了我们对该人群选择行为病因的理解。