Polygenic Risk for Externalizing Disorders

Author:

Salvatore Jessica E.1,Aliev Fazil1,Bucholz Kathleen2,Agrawal Arpana2,Hesselbrock Victor3,Hesselbrock Michie4,Bauer Lance3,Kuperman Samuel5,Schuckit Marc A.6,Kramer John R.5,Edenberg Howard J.7,Foroud Tatiana M.8,Dick Danielle M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, Virginia Commonwealth University

2. Department of Psychiatry, Washington University

3. Department of Psychiatry, University of Connecticut

4. School of Social Work, University of Connecticut

5. Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa

6. Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego

7. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Indiana University

8. Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics, Indiana University

Abstract

In this project, we aimed to bring large-scale gene-identification findings into a developmental psychopathology framework. Using a family-based sample, we tested whether polygenic scores for externalizing disorders—based on single nucleotide polymorphism weights derived from genome-wide association study results in adults ( n = 1,249)—predicted externalizing disorders, subclinical externalizing behavior, and impulsivity-related traits among adolescents ( n = 248) and young adults ( n = 207) and whether parenting and peer factors in adolescence moderated polygenic risk to predict externalizing disorders. Polygenic scores predicted externalizing disorders in adolescents and young adults, even after we controlled for parental externalizing-disorder history. Polygenic scores also predicted subclinical externalizing behavior and impulsivity traits in the adolescents and young adults. Adolescent parental monitoring and peer substance use moderated polygenic scores to predict externalizing disorders. This illustrates how state-of-the-science genetics can be integrated with psychological science to identify how genetic risk contributes to the development of psychopathology.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology

Reference62 articles.

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