Intergenerational Transmission of Parental Mental Health and Wellbeing Traits on Offspring Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties

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Abstract

Importance

Parental mental health and wellbeing are strongly associated with offspring emotional, behavioural and temperament difficulties in the preschool years, which in turn are linked to later mental illness. Understanding how intergenerational transmission of parental mental health and wellbeing traits occurs can inform intervention strategies.

Objective

Intergenerational transmission of mental health and wellbeing traits can occur through both genetic and environmental pathways, which can be disentangled using genetic data from mother-father-child trios. In preschool-aged offspring, we estimated the relative importance of “genetic transmission”, where parental genetic factors directly transmitted to the offspring influence offspring traits, versus “genetic nurture”, where parental genetic factors shape the child’s environment, which in turn influences the offspring’s traits.

Design

We used a trio-polygenic score design. Our primary model used structural equation modelling with full information maximum likelihood estimation to account for missing data.

Setting

We used data from the Norwegian Mother Father and Child Cohort Study (MoBa), a pregnancy-based population cohort recruited in Norway from 1999-2008.

Participants

The model included up to 43,036 genotyped trios with child outcome measurements.

Exposures

Parental genetic predisposition to mental health and wellbeing traits: depression, anxiety, neuroticism, wellbeing, life satisfaction and positive affect.

Main Outcomes/Measures

Longitudinal development of mother-rated offspring emotional, behavioural and temperament difficulties from age 1.5- to 5-years.

Results

Genetic nurture explained more variance in preschool emotional, behavioural and temperament difficulties than did direct genetic transmission. There was evidence for significantly larger maternal than paternal genetic nurture effects, in particular for positive affect, life satisfaction and anxiety PGS. Genetic nurture from wellbeing traits was associated with reduced preschool emotional, behavioural and temperament difficulties. Genetic nurture effects on behavioural difficulties were significantly larger from wellbeing traits than mental health traits.

Conclusions

Our findings suggest a greater relative importance of genetic nurture in the associations between parental mental health and wellbeing traits on preschool emotional, behavioural and temperament difficulties. We found genetic nurture for parental wellbeing traits, consistent with theories that positive family environments could foster resilience in preschool children beyond inherited genetic predispositions. Further investigation to identify specific components of genetic nurture estimates is warranted.

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