CHRM2, Parental Monitoring, and Adolescent Externalizing Behavior

Author:

Dick Danielle M.1,Meyers Jacquelyn L.1,Latendresse Shawn J.1,Creemers Hanneke E.23,Lansford Jennifer E.4,Pettit Gregory S.5,Bates John E.6,Dodge Kenneth A.4,Budde John7,Goate Alison7,Buitelaar Jan K.8,Ormel Johannes9,Verhulst Frank C.2,Huizink Anja C.23

Affiliation:

1. Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University

2. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Erasmus University Medical Center

3. Department of Education, Faculty of Behavioral and Social Sciences, University of Amsterdam

4. Center for Child and Family Policy, Duke University

5. Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Auburn University

6. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University

7. Department of Psychiatry, Washington University

8. Department of Psychiatry, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center

9. Interdisciplinary Center for Psychiatric Epidemiology (ICPE), Graduate School for Behaviour, Cognition and Neurosciences (BCN), Graduate School for Health Research (SHARE), University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen

Abstract

Psychologists, with their long-standing tradition of studying mechanistic processes, can make important contributions to further characterizing the risk associated with genes identified as influencing risk for psychiatric disorders. We report one such effort with respect to CHRM2, which codes for the cholinergic muscarinic 2 receptor and was of interest originally for its association with alcohol dependence. We tested for association between CHRM2 and prospectively measured externalizing behavior in a longitudinal, community-based sample of adolescents, as well as for moderation of this association by parental monitoring. We found evidence for an interaction in which the association between the genotype and externalizing behavior was stronger in environments with lower parental monitoring. There was also suggestion of a crossover effect, in which the genotype associated with the highest levels of externalizing behavior under low parental monitoring had the lowest levels of externalizing behavior at the extreme high end of parental monitoring. The difficulties involved in distinguishing mechanisms of gene-environment interaction are discussed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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