Polygenic risk and hostile environments: Links to stable and dynamic antisocial behaviors across adolescence

Adverse environments are linked to elevated youth antisocial behavior. However, this relation is thought to depend, in part, on genetic susceptibility. The present study investigated whether polygenic risk for antisociality moderates relations between hostile environments and stable as well as dynam...

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Veröffentlicht in:Development and psychopathology 2025-02, Vol.37 (1), p.464-476
Hauptverfasser: Acland, E L, Pocuca, N, Paquin, S, Boivin, M, Ouellet-Morin, I, Andlauer, T F M, Gouin, J P, Côté, S M, Tremblay, R E, Geoffroy, M, Castellanos-Ryan, N
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container_issue 1
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container_title Development and psychopathology
container_volume 37
creator Acland, E L
Pocuca, N
Paquin, S
Boivin, M
Ouellet-Morin, I
Andlauer, T F M
Gouin, J P
Côté, S M
Tremblay, R E
Geoffroy, M
Castellanos-Ryan, N
description Adverse environments are linked to elevated youth antisocial behavior. However, this relation is thought to depend, in part, on genetic susceptibility. The present study investigated whether polygenic risk for antisociality moderates relations between hostile environments and stable as well as dynamic antisocial behaviors across adolescence. We derived two antisocial-linked polygenic risk scores (PRS) ( = 721) based on previous genome-wide association studies. Forms of antisocial behavior (nonaggressive conduct problems, physical aggression, social aggression) and environmental hostility (harsh parenting and school violence) were assessed at age 13, 15, and 17 years. Relations to individual differences stable across adolescence (latent stability) vs. time-specific states (timepoint residual variance) of antisocial behavior were assessed via structural equation models. Higher antisocial PRS, harsh parenting, and school violence were linked to stable elevations in antisocial behaviors across adolescence. We identified a consistent polygenic-environment interaction suggestive of differential susceptibility in late adolescence. At age 17, harsher parenting was linked to higher social aggression in those with higher antisocial PRS, and lower social aggression in those with lower antisocial PRS. This suggests that genetics and environmental hostility relate to stable youth antisocial behaviors, and that genetic susceptibility moderates home environment-antisocial associations specifically in late adolescence.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S095457942400004X
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subjects Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior - psychology
Aggression - psychology
Antisocial Personality Disorder - genetics
Antisocial Personality Disorder - psychology
Conduct Disorder - genetics
Conduct Disorder - psychology
Female
Gene-Environment Interaction
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genome-Wide Association Study
Hostility
Humans
Male
Multifactorial Inheritance
Parenting - psychology
Risk Factors
Social Environment
Violence - psychology
title Polygenic risk and hostile environments: Links to stable and dynamic antisocial behaviors across adolescence
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