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Reported early family environment covaries with menarcheal age as a function of polymorphic variation in estrogen receptor-α

Authors :
Stephen B. Manuck
Indrani Halder
Anna E. Craig
Janine D. Flory
Robert E. Ferrell
Source :
Development and Psychopathology. 23:69-83
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2011.

Abstract

Age at menarche, a sentinel index of pubertal maturation, was examined in relation to early family relationships (conflict, cohesion) and polymorphic variation in the gene encoding estrogen receptor-α (ESR1) in a midlife sample of 455 European American women. Consistent with prior literature, women who reported being raised in families characterized by close interpersonal relationships and little conflict tended to reach menarche at a later age than participants reared in families lacking cohesion and prone to discord. Moreover, this association was moderated byESR1variation, such that quality of the family environment covaried positively with menarcheal age among participants homozygous for minor alleles of the twoESR1polymorphisms studied here (rs9304799, rs2234693), but not among women of otherESR1genotypes. In addition, (a) family relationship variables were unrelated toESR1variation, and (b) genotype-dependent effects of childhood environment on age at menarche could not be accounted for by personality traits elsewhere shown to explain heritable variation in reported family conflict and cohesion. These findings are consistent with theories of differential susceptibility to environmental influence, as well as the more specific hypothesis (by Belsky) that girls differ genetically in their sensitivity to rearing effects on pubertal maturation.

Details

ISSN :
14692198 and 09545794
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Development and Psychopathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....51abf4abd54cf9fb40ef97f66a72e25c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0954579410000659