Heath A C, Madden P A, Slutske W S, Martin N G
Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA.
Behav Genet. 1995 Mar;25(2):103-17. doi: 10.1007/BF02196921.
In contrast to the extensive research effort to understand the genetic contribution to alcoholism risk, there has been little research directed at understanding genetic influences on smoking behavior. Data from large twin studies in Scandinavia and Australia are consistent with a major genetic influence on the probability that an individual will become a smoker ("initiation") and will persist in the smoking habit once smoking has started ("persistence"). We use data from the 1988/1989 follow-up survey of the Australian NH&MRC twin panel to determine to what degree personality measures (Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire, Eysenck Personality Questionnaire--Revised) and attitudinal and sociodemographic variables (social and political conservatism, education, religious involvement) might account for genetic or environmental influences on smoking. While we find significant phenotypic associations between these variables and smoking, these are too modest to account for much of the genetic variance. Possible mechanisms by which this genetic variance may arise are discussed.
与为了解酒精成瘾风险的遗传因素而进行的广泛研究努力形成对比的是,针对理解遗传因素对吸烟行为影响的研究却很少。来自斯堪的纳维亚半岛和澳大利亚的大型双胞胎研究数据表明,遗传因素对个体成为吸烟者的可能性(“起始”)以及一旦开始吸烟后保持吸烟习惯的可能性(“持续”)有重大影响。我们使用来自澳大利亚国家卫生与医学研究委员会(NH&MRC)双胞胎小组1988/1989年随访调查的数据,来确定人格测量指标(三维人格问卷、艾森克人格问卷修订版)以及态度和社会人口统计学变量(社会和政治保守主义、教育程度、宗教参与度)在多大程度上可能解释遗传或环境因素对吸烟的影响。虽然我们发现这些变量与吸烟之间存在显著的表型关联,但这些关联程度太小,无法解释大部分遗传变异。文中还讨论了这种遗传变异可能产生的潜在机制。