TY - JOUR
T1 - Genetic differential susceptibility to the parent-child relationship quality and the life span development of compassion
AU - Dobewall, Henrik
AU - Keltikangas-Järvinen, Liisa
AU - Saarinen, Aino
AU - Lyytikäinen, Leo-Pekka
AU - Zwir, Igor
AU - Cloninger, Robert
AU - Raitakari, Olli T.
AU - Lehtimäki, Terho
AU - Hintsanen, Mirka
PY - 2021/9
Y1 - 2021/9
N2 - The development of compassion for others might be influenced by the social experiences made during childhood and has a genetic component. No research has yet investigated whether the parent-child relationship quality interacts with genetic variation in the oxytocin and dopamine systems in predicting compassion over the life span. In the prospective Young Finns Study (N = 2099, 43.9% men), we examined the interaction between mother-reported emotional warmth and intolerance toward their child assessed in 1980 (age of participants, 3-18 years) and two established genetic risk scores for oxytocin levels and dopamine signaling activity. Dispositional compassion for others was measured with the Temperament and Character Inventory 1997, 2001, and 2012 (age of participants, 20-50 years). We found a gene-environment interaction (p = .031) that remained marginally significant after adjustment for multiple testing. In line with the differential susceptibility hypothesis, only participants who carry alleles associated with low dopamine signaling activity had higher levels of compassion when growing up with emotionally warm parents, whereas they had lower levels of compassion when their parents were emotionally cold. Children's genetic variability in the dopamine system might result in plasticity to early environmental influences that have a long-lasting effect on the development of compassion. However, our findings need replication.
AB - The development of compassion for others might be influenced by the social experiences made during childhood and has a genetic component. No research has yet investigated whether the parent-child relationship quality interacts with genetic variation in the oxytocin and dopamine systems in predicting compassion over the life span. In the prospective Young Finns Study (N = 2099, 43.9% men), we examined the interaction between mother-reported emotional warmth and intolerance toward their child assessed in 1980 (age of participants, 3-18 years) and two established genetic risk scores for oxytocin levels and dopamine signaling activity. Dispositional compassion for others was measured with the Temperament and Character Inventory 1997, 2001, and 2012 (age of participants, 20-50 years). We found a gene-environment interaction (p = .031) that remained marginally significant after adjustment for multiple testing. In line with the differential susceptibility hypothesis, only participants who carry alleles associated with low dopamine signaling activity had higher levels of compassion when growing up with emotionally warm parents, whereas they had lower levels of compassion when their parents were emotionally cold. Children's genetic variability in the dopamine system might result in plasticity to early environmental influences that have a long-lasting effect on the development of compassion. However, our findings need replication.
KW - compassion
KW - dopamine and oxytocin signaling pathways
KW - gene-environment interaction
KW - parenting
KW - personality development
KW - OXYTOCIN RECEPTOR GENE
KW - ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION RESEARCH
KW - PROSOCIAL BEHAVIOR
KW - FUNCTIONAL POLYMORPHISM
KW - CLONINGERS TEMPERAMENT
KW - PSYCHOBIOLOGICAL MODEL
KW - CARDIOVASCULAR RISK
KW - FOLLOW-UP
KW - ASSOCIATION
KW - PERSONALITY
KW - 515 Psychology
U2 - 10.1002/dev.22184
DO - 10.1002/dev.22184
M3 - Article
SN - 0012-1630
VL - 63
JO - Developmental Psychobiology
JF - Developmental Psychobiology
IS - 6
M1 - 22184
ER -