Exploring the possibility of parents' broad internalizing phenotype acting through passive gene-environment correlations on daughters' disordered eating

Shannon M. O'Connor, Megan Mikhail, Carolina Anaya, Leora L. Haller, S. Alexandra Burt, Matt McGue, William G. Iacono, Kelly L. Klump

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Twin studies demonstrate significant environmental influences and a lack of genetic effects on disordered eating before puberty in girls. However, genetic factors could act indirectly through passive gene-environment correlations (rGE; correlations between parents' genes and an environment shaped by those genes) that inflate environmental (but not genetic) estimates. The only study to explore passive rGE did not find significant effects, but the full range of parental phenotypes (e.g., internalizing symptoms) that could impact daughters' disordered eating was not examined. We addressed this gap by exploring whether parents' internalizing symptoms (e.g., anxiety, depressive symptoms) contribute to daughters' eating pathology through passive rGE. Participants were female twin pairs (aged 8-14 years; M = 10.44) in pre-early puberty and their biological parents (n = 279 families) from the Michigan State University Twin Registry. Nuclear twin family models explored passive rGE for parents' internalizing traits/symptoms and twins' overall eating disorder symptoms. No evidence for passive rGE was found. Instead, environmental factors that create similarities between co-Twins (but not with their parents) and unique environmental factors were important. In pre-early puberty, genetic factors do not influence daughters' disordered eating, even indirectly through passive rGE. Future research should explore sibling-specific and unique environmental factors during this critical developmental period.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1744-1755
Number of pages12
JournalDevelopment and psychopathology
Volume34
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 19 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This research was supported by grants from the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation and the Michigan State University Psychology Department awarded to Dr Shannon O’Connor, the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH: 1 R01 MH09038) awarded to Drs. Kelly Klump and S. Alexandra Burt, and the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (R01 AA 09367) and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (R01 DA 013240) awarded to Drs. Matthew McGue and William Iacono.

Publisher Copyright:
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Keywords

  • Disordered eating
  • eating disorders
  • family
  • internalizing
  • twin study

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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