Genetic and environmental influences on the transmission of parental depression to children’s depression and conduct disturbance: an extended Children of Twins study
- 10 May 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
- Vol. 51 (6) , 734-744
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7610.2010.02205.x
Abstract
Background: Despite the increased risk of depression and conduct problems in children of depressed parents, the mechanism by which parental depression affects their children’s behavioral and emotional functioning is not well understood. The present study was undertaken to determine whether parental depression represents a genuine environmental risk factor in children’s psychopathology, or whether children’s depression/conduct can be explained as a secondary consequence of the genetic liability transmitted from parents to their offspring. Methods: Children of Twins (COT) data collected on 2,674 adult female and male twins, their spouses, and 2,940 of their children were used to address whether genetic and/or family environmental factors best account for the association between depression in parents and depression and conduct problems in their children. Data collected on juvenile twins from the Virginia Twin Study of Adolescent Behavioral Development (VTSABD) were also included to estimate child‐specific genetic and environmental influences apart from those effects arising from the transmission of the parental depression itself. The fit of alternative Children of Twin models were evaluated using the statistical program Mx. Results: The most compelling model for the association between parental and juvenile depression was a model of direct environmental risk. Both family environmental and genetic factors accounted for the association between parental depression and child conduct disturbance. Conclusions: These findings illustrate how a genetically mediated behavior such as parental depression can have both an environmental and genetic impact on children’s behavior. We find developmentally specific genetic factors underlying risk to juvenile and adult depression. A shared genetic liability influences both parental depression and juvenile conduct disturbance, implicating child conduct disturbance (CD) as an early indicator of genetic risk for depression in adulthood. In summary, our analyses demonstrate differences in the impact of parental depression on different forms of child psychopathology, and at various stages of development.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Flexible Mx Specification of Various Extended Twin Kinship DesignsTwin Research and Human Genetics, 2009
- Modeling Extended Twin Family Data II: Power Associated With Different Family StructuresTwin Research and Human Genetics, 2009
- Children of Depressed Mothers 1 Year After the Initiation of Maternal Treatment: Findings From the STAR*D-Child StudyAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 2008
- An Adoption Study of Parental Depression as an Environmental Liability for Adolescent Depression and Childhood Disruptive DisordersAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 2008
- Testing different types of genotype-environment correlation: An extended children-of-twins model.Developmental Psychology, 2008
- The development of psychopathology from infancy to adulthood: The mysterious unfolding of disturbance in timeInfant Mental Health Journal: Infancy and Early Childhood, 2003
- Family-genetic findings in child and adolescent depressive disordersInternational Review of Psychiatry, 1996
- A model system for analysis of family resemblance in extended kinships of twinsBehavior Genetics, 1994
- The resolution of cultural and biological inheritance: Informativeness of different relationshipsBehavior Genetics, 1985
- Resolving the effects of phenotype and social background on mate selectionBehavior Genetics, 1985