“Gene-Environment Interplay in Early Life Cognitive Development”, 2023-03-11 ():
We tested the gene-environment interplay in early life cognitive development.
We used polygenic scores for education and 39 early life environment measures.
Widespread gene-environment correlations (rGE) emerged in early life cognitive development.
No consistent gene-environment interactions (G×E) were observed.
Genetics and environments had direct and additive effects on early life cognitive development.
Children’s differences in early life cognitive development are driven by the interplay of genetic and environmental factors, but identifying replicable gene-environment interactions (G×E) has proven difficult.
We systematically tested G×E effects in the prediction of cognitive development 2–4 years, using polygenic scores (PGS) for years spent in education and 39 measures of the home and neighborhood environment. Data came from up to 6,973 unrelated individuals from the Twins Early Development Study (TEDS), a UK population-representative cohort.
The environmental measures accounted together for 20.6% of the variance in cognitive development, while the PGS accounted for 0.5% (p < 0.001). We observed substantial gene-environment correlations but found no conclusive evidence for G×E effects.
While associations between PGS and cognitive development were weak, genetic and environmental factors had direct and additive (ie. main effects) rather than interactive influences on early life cognitive development.
[Keywords: gene-environment interplay, polygenic scores, cognitive development, gene-environment interaction, TEDS]
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