FMR1 genotype interacts with parenting stress to shape health and functional abilities in older age

This study investigated the association of genotype (CGG repeats in FMR1) and the health and well‐being of 5,628 aging adults (mean age = 71) in a population‐based study. Two groups were contrasted: aging parents who had adult children with developmental or mental health disabilities (n = 785; the high‐stress parenting group) and aging parents of healthy children who did not have disabilities (n = 4843; the low‐stress parenting group). There were significant curvilinear interaction effects between parenting stress group and CGG repeats for body mass index and indicators of health and functional limitations, and the results were suggestive of interactions for limitations in cognitive functioning. Parents who had adult children with disabilities and whose genotype was two standard deviations above or below the mean numbers of CGGs had poorer health and functional outcomes at age 71 than parents with average numbers of CGGs. In contrast, parents who had healthy adult children and who had similarly high or low numbers of CGG repeats had better health and functional outcomes than parents with average numbers of CGGs. This pattern of gene by environment interactions was consistent with differential susceptibility or the flip‐flop phenomenon. This study illustrates how research that begins with a rare genetic condition (such as fragile X syndrome) can lead to insights about the general population and contributes to understanding of how genetic differences shape...
Source: American Journal of Medical Genetics Part B: Neuropsychiatric Genetics - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Authors: Tags: Research Article Source Type: research