Anxiety- and mood disorders
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Genotype–environment correlations: Implications for determining the relationship between environmental exposures and psychiatric illness
By: Jaffee, S. R., & Price, T. S. (2008)
Psychiatry, 7, 496–499
Psychological risk factors for psychiatric illness are moderately heritable.
This has two implications
There are three types of genotype-environment correlation
These forms of genotype-environment correlation differ from gene-environment interaction (GxE), which refers to genetic differences in sensitivity to particular environmental effects.
Twin and adoption studies demonstrated that putative environmental measures are heritable.
These include many environments that are associated with psychiatric illness, including:
The weighted heritability of these environments ranges from 6 to 39%, with most ranging from 15 to 35%.
When a study involves child twins reporting their experiences, genetic influences on the putative environment reflect the extent to which the child’s genetic propensities elicit or evoke that experience.
When studies involve samples of adult twins reporting their experiences, genetic influences on the putative environment reflect the extent to which the adult’s genetic propensities modify or create that experience.
Environments are heritable because genotype influences the behaviours that evoke, select, and modify features of the environment.
Environments less amenable to behavioural modification tend to be less heritable.
Molecular studies measure genotype directly.
It may be possible to identify specific genotypes that correlate with environmental variables.
Significant genotype-environment correlations are relatively uncommon.
The existence of genotype-environment correlation raises two possibilities with implications for the prevention and treatment of psychiatric illness
In some cases, a causal link between psychosocial risk factors and psychiatric outcomes can be established, even if exposure to the risk environment is under genetic influence.
The origins of a risk factor and the mechanism by which its effects are exerted are separable and may be distinct.
There are often reciprocal relationships between psychosocial risk factors and psychiatric outcomes.
Form many disorders, successful treatment will need to be targeted at multiple levels.
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This is a bundle with information about anxiety- and mood disorders.
The bundle is based on the course anxiety- and mood disorders taught at the third year of psychology at the University of Amsterdam.
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