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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 :
Lucía Colodro-Conde
Aysu Okbay
Kenneth S. Kendler
Brion S. Maher
Nicholas G. Martin
Timothy C. Bates
Margaret J. Wright
Sarah E. Medland
Kerrie McAloney
Nathan A. Gillespie
Narelle K. Hansell
Economics
Amsterdam Neuroscience - Complex Trait Genetics
Source :
Bates, T C, Maher, B S, Colodro-Conde, L, Medland, S E, McAloney, K, Wright, M J, Hansell, N K, Okbay, A, Kendler, K S, Martin, N G & Gillespie, N A 2019, ' Social Competence in Parents Increases Children's Educational Attainment : Replicable Genetically-Mediated Effects of Parenting Revealed by Non-Transmitted DNA ', Twin Research and Human Genetics, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 70-74 . https://doi.org/10.1017/thg.2018.75, Bates, T, Maher, B S, Colodro-Conde, L, Medland, S E, McAloney, K, Wright, M J, Hansell, N K, Okbay, A, Kendler, K S, Martin, N G & Gillespie, N A 2019, ' Social competence in parents increases children’s educational attainment : Replicable genetically-mediated effects of parenting revealed by non-transmitted DNA ', Twin Research and Human Genetics, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 1-3 . https://doi.org/10.1017/thg.2018.75, Twin Research and Human Genetics, 22(1), 70-74. Australian Academic Press
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 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.

Details

ISSN :
18392628 and 18324274
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Twin Research and Human Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....76e73eae5a1e13cf3822dab817d95357
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/thg.2018.75