Mortality in Women across the FMR1 CGG Repeat Range: The Neuroprotective Effect of Higher Education

Author:

Hong Jinkuk1,Dembo Robert S.12,DaWalt Leann Smith1,Baker Mei Wang34ORCID,Berry-Kravis Elizabeth567,Mailick Marsha R.1

Affiliation:

1. Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53705, USA

2. NORC at the University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60603, USA

3. Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53792, USA

4. Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, Madison, WI 53706, USA

5. Department of Pediatrics, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA

6. Department of Neurological Sciences, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA

7. Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA

Abstract

Higher education has been shown to have neuroprotective effects, reducing the risk of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, slowing the rate of age-related cognitive decline, and is associated with lower rates of early mortality. In the present study, the association between higher education, fragile X messenger ribonucleoprotein 1 (FMR1) cytosine–guanine–guanine (CGG) repeat number, and mortality before life expectancy was investigated in a population cohort of women born in 1939. The findings revealed a significant interaction between years of higher education and CGG repeat number. Counter to the study’s hypothesis, the effects of higher education became more pronounced as the number of CGG repeats increased. There was no effect of years of higher education on early mortality for women who had 25 repeats, while each year of higher education decreased the hazard of early mortality by 8% for women who had 30 repeats. For women with 41 repeats, the hazard was decreased by 14% for each additional year of higher education. The interaction remained significant after controlling for IQ and family socioeconomic status (SES) measured during high school, as well as factors measured during adulthood (family, psychosocial, health, and financial factors). The results are interpreted in the context of differential sensitivity to the environment, a conceptualization that posits that some people are more reactive to both negative and positive environmental conditions. Expansions in CGG repeats have been shown in previous FMR1 research to manifest such a differential sensitivity pattern.

Funder

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Birth Defects and Developmental Disorders through the Association for University Centers on Disability

National Institute on Aging

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Waisman Center

University of Wisconsin–Madison

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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