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Mapping Pathways by Which Genetic Risk Influences Adolescent Externalizing Behavior: The Interplay Between Externalizing Polygenic Risk Scores, Parental Knowledge, and Peer Substance Use

Authors :
John I. Nurnberger
Dongbing Lai
Travis T. Mallard
Peter B. Barr
Kathleen K. Bucholz
Sally I.Chun Kuo
Chella Kamarajan
Sandra Sanchez-Roige
John Kramer
Howard J. Edenberg
Jessica E. Salvatore
Victor Hesselbrock
Irwin D. Waldman
Fazil Aliev
Martin H. Plawecki
Danielle M. Dick
Gayathri Pandey
Abraham A. Palmer
Grace Chan
Andrey P. Anokhin
Source :
Behav Genet, Behavior genetics, vol 51, iss 5
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Genetic predispositions and environmental influences both play an important role in adolescent externalizing behavior; however, they are not always independent. To elucidate gene-environment interplay, we examined the interrelationships between externalizing polygenic risk scores, parental knowledge, and peer substance use in impacting adolescent externalizing behavior across two time-points in a high-risk longitudinal sample of 1,200 adolescents (764 European and 436 African ancestry; M(age) = 12.99) from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism. Results from multivariate path analysis indicated that externalizing polygenic scores were directly associated with adolescent externalizing behavior but also indirectly via peer substance use, in the European ancestry sample. No significant polygenic association nor indirect effects of genetic risk were observed in the African ancestry group, likely due to more limited power. Our findings underscore the importance of gene-environment interplay and suggest peer substance use may be a mechanism through which genetic risk influences adolescent externalizing behavior.

Details

ISSN :
15733297 and 00018244
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Behavior Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2446ebbf28c97e5c852664878cee23fb