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      Alcohol-related Genes Show an Enrichment of Associations with a Persistent Externalizing Factor

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          Abstract

          Research using twins has found that much of the variability in externalizing phenotypes – including alcohol and drug use, impulsive personality traits, risky sex and property crime – is explained by genetic factors. Nevertheless, identification of specific genes and variants associated with these traits has proven to be difficult, likely because individual differences in externalizing are explained by many genes of small individual effect. Moreover, twin research indicates that heritable variance in externalizing behaviors is mostly shared across the externalizing spectrum rather than specific to any behavior. We use a longitudinal, “deep phenotyping” approach to model a general externalizing factor reflecting persistent engagement in a variety of socially problematic behaviors measured at eleven assessment occasions spanning early adulthood (ages 18 to 28). In an ancestrally homogenous sample of non-Hispanic Whites ( N = 337), we then tested for enrichment of associations between the persistent externalizing factor and a set of 3,281 polymorphisms within 104 genes that were previously identified as associated with alcohol-use behaviors. Next we tested for enrichment among domain-specific factors (e.g., property crime) composed of residual variance not accounted for by the common factor. Significance was determined relative to bootstrapped empirical thresholds derived from permutations of phenotypic data. Results indicated significant enrichment of genetic associations for persistent externalizing, but not for domain-specific factors. Consistent with twin research findings, these results suggest that genetic variants are broadly associated with externalizing behaviors rather than unique to specific behaviors.

          General Scientific Summary

          This study shows that variation in 104 genes is associated with socially problematic “externalizing” behavior, including substance misuse, property crime, risky sex, and aspects of impulsive personality. Importantly, this association was with the common variation across these behaviors rather than with the variation unique to any given behavior. The manuscript demonstrates a potentially advantageous technique for relating sets of hypothesized genes to complex traits or behaviors.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          0034461
          4417
          J Abnorm Psychol
          J Abnorm Psychol
          Journal of abnormal psychology
          0021-843X
          1939-1846
          22 July 2016
          8 August 2016
          October 2016
          01 October 2017
          : 125
          : 7
          : 933-945
          Affiliations
          Psychology Department, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA
          Psychology Department, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA
          Psychology Department, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA
          Psychology Department, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA
          Author notes
          Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to James R. Ashenhurst, Psychology Department, 108 E. Dean Keeton A8000, University of Texas at Austin. Austin, TX 78712. james.ashenhurst@ 123456gmail.com
          Article
          PMC5061610 PMC5061610 5061610 nihpa804338
          10.1037/abn0000194
          5061610
          27505405
          462771c5-59a6-442c-8c63-751898202097
          History
          Categories
          Article

          deviant behavior,impulsive traits,genetic polymorphisms,problem behavior,enrichment analysis,externalizing behavior

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