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Genetic nurture effects for alcohol use disorder.

Nathaniel S ThomasJessica E SalvatoreSally I-Chun KuoFazil AlievVivia V McCutcheonJacquelyn M MeyersKathleen K BucholzSarah J BrislinGrace ChanHoward J EdenbergChella KamarajanJohn R KramerSamuel KupermanGayathri PandeyMartin Henry PlaweckiMarc A SchuckitDanielle M Dicknull null
Published in: Molecular psychiatry (2022)
We tested whether aspects of the childhood/adolescent home environment mediate genetic risk for alcohol problems within families across generations. Parental relationship discord and parental divorce were the focal environments examined. The sample included participants of European ancestry (N = 4806, 51% female) and African ancestry (N = 1960, 52% female) from the high-risk Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism. Alcohol outcomes in the child generation included lifetime criterion counts for DSM-5 Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD), lifetime maximum drinks in 24 h, age at initiation of regular drinking, and age at first alcohol intoxication. Predictors in the parent generation included relationship discord, divorce, alcohol measures parallel to those in the child generation, and polygenic scores for alcohol problems. Parental polygenic scores were partitioned into alleles that were transmitted and non-transmitted to the child. The results from structural equation models were consistent with genetic nurture effects in European ancestry families. Exposure to parental relationship discord and parental divorce mediated, in part, the transmission of genetic risk for alcohol problems from parents to children to predict earlier ages regular drinking (β indirect  = -0.018 [-0.026, -0.011]) and intoxication (β indirect  = -0.015 [-0.023, -0.008]), greater lifetime maximum drinks (β indirect  = 0.006 [0.002, 0.01]) and more lifetime AUD criteria (β indirect  = 0.011 [0.006, 0.016]). In contrast, there was no evidence that parental alleles had indirect effects on offspring alcohol outcomes via parental relationship discord or divorce in the smaller number of families of African ancestry. In conclusion, parents transmit genetic risk for alcohol problems to their children not only directly, but also indirectly via genetically influenced aspects of the home environment. Further investigation of genetic nurture in non-European samples is needed.
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