Polygenic Scores for Plasticity: A New Tool for Studying Gene–Environment Interplay

Author:

Johnson Rebecca1ORCID,Sotoudeh Ramina2ORCID,Conley Dalton3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. McCourt School of Public Policy, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA

2. Nuffield College, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

3. Department of Sociology and Office of Population Research, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA

Abstract

Abstract Fertility, health, education, and other outcomes of interest to demographers are the product of an individual's genetic makeup and their social environment. Yet, gene × environment (G×E) research deploys a limited toolkit on the genetic side to study the gene–environment interplay, relying on polygenic scores (PGSs) that reflect the influence of genetics on levels of an outcome. In this article, we develop a genetic summary measure better suited for G×E research: variance polygenic scores (vPGSs), which are PGSs that reflect genetic contributions to plasticity in outcomes. First, we use the UK Biobank (N ∼ 408,000 in the analytic sample) and the Health and Retirement Study (N ∼ 5,700 in the analytic sample) to compare four approaches to constructing PGSs for plasticity. The results show that widely used methods for discovering which genetic variants affect outcome variability fail to serve as distinctive new tools for G×E. Second, using the PGSs that do capture distinctive genetic contributions to plasticity, we analyze heterogeneous effects of a UK education reform on health and educational attainment. The results show the properties of a useful new tool for population scientists studying the interplay of nature and nurture and for population-based studies that are releasing PGSs to applied researchers.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

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