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Social Competence in Parents Increases Children's Educational Attainment: Replicable Genetically-Mediated Effects of Parenting Revealed by Non-Transmitted DNA.

Authors :
Bates, Timothy C.
Maher, Brion S.
Colodro-Conde, Lucía
Medland, Sarah E.
McAloney, Kerrie
Wright, Margaret J.
Hansell, Narelle K.
Okbay, Aysu
Kendler, Kenneth S.
Martin, Nicholas G.
Gillespie, Nathan A.
Source :
Twin Research & Human Genetics. Feb2019, Vol. 22 Issue 1, p1-3. 3p. 1 Chart, 1 Graph.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We recently reported an association of offspring educational attainment with polygenic risk scores (PRS) computed on parent's non-transmitted alleles for educational attainment using the second GWAS meta-analysis article on educational attainment published by the Social Science Genetic Association Consortium. Here we test the replication of these findings using a more powerful PRS from the third GWAS meta-analysis article by the Consortium. Each of the key findings of our previous paper is replicated using this improved PRS (N = 2335 adolescent twins and their genotyped parents). The association of children's attainment with their own PRS increased substantially with the standardized effect size, moving from β = 0.134, 95% CI = 0.079, 0.188 for EA2, to β = 0.223, 95% CI = 0.169, 0.278, p < .001, for EA3. Parent's PRS again predicted the socioeconomic status (SES) they provided to their offspring and increased from β = 0.201, 95% CI = 0.147, 0.256 to β = 0.286, 95% CI = 0.239, 0.333. Importantly, the PRS for alleles not transmitted to their offspring - therefore acting via the parenting environment - was increased in effect size from β = 0.058, 95% CI = 0.003, 0.114 to β = 0.067, 95% CI = 0.012, 0.122, p = .016. As previously found, this non-transmitted genetic effect was fully accounted for by parental SES. The findings reinforce the conclusion that genetic effects of parenting are substantial, explain approximately one-third the magnitude of an individual's own genetic inheritance and are mediated by parental socioeconomic competence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18324274
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Twin Research & Human Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135716861
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/thg.2018.75