TY - JOUR
T1 - The Interaction of Polygenic Susceptibility to Stress and Childhood Adversity Dimensions Predicts Longitudinal Trajectories of Stress‐Sensitivity in Stress and Health
AU - Barrantes-Vidal, Neus
AU - Gizdic , Alena
AU - Torrecilla Gonzalez, Pilar
AU - Mas-Bermejo, Patricia
AU - Sheinbaum, Tamara
AU - Papiol, Sergi
AU - Lafit, Ginette
AU - Myin-Gemeys, Inez
AU - Rosa, Araceli
AU - Kwapil, Thomas
N1 - © 2024 The Author(s). Stress and Health published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2024/11/14
Y1 - 2024/11/14
N2 - Stress-sensitivity (SS) is considered a psychobiological trait possibly resulting from the interaction of genetic and environmental factors (GxE). This study examined whether the interaction of SS-related genetic markers with interview-based dimensions of childhood adversity predicted longitudinal trajectories of low versus high SS. Participants were nonclinically-ascertained young adults comprising normative and elevated scores on schizotypy. SS trajectories were defined in a previous report based on three prospective assessments (23.5, 25, 28 years-old) of both retrospective (Perceived Stress Scale; PSS) and momentary (Experience Sampling Methodology; ESM) stress ratings. A total of n = 177 and n = 165 participants with PSS and ESM stress-sensitivity trajectories, respectively, as well as genetic data, were included in the study. GxE effects between a SS Polygenic Risk Score (PRS-SS) and a Genetic Risk Score of the Hypothalamic Pituitary Adrenal axis (GRS-HPA) with childhood adversity dimensions (Intrafamilial Adversity, Threat and Deprivation) on SS trajectories were examined. Threat was the most consistent predictor of persistently high SS. PRS-SS moderated the association of Threat with high-PSS. GRS-HPA moderated the effects of all adversity dimensions on high-PSS. The interaction of PRS-SS with Deprivation and GRS-HPA with Intrafamilial Adversity predicted trajectories of momentary social stress, but the effects were driven by those with lower genetic susceptibility. Genetic-HPA-axis moderates the effects of all adversity dimensions on persistent SS trajectories, as well as PRS-SS and Threat, particularly for retrospective stress measure. The findings highlight the complex interplay between GxE factors and suggest that PSS may better capture SS trait. Including biologically-meaningful GRS indexing SS and adversity dimensions in future studies using comprehensive stress measures would enhance our knowledge on high SS susceptibility and its relationship with diverse psychopathological outcomes.
AB - Stress-sensitivity (SS) is considered a psychobiological trait possibly resulting from the interaction of genetic and environmental factors (GxE). This study examined whether the interaction of SS-related genetic markers with interview-based dimensions of childhood adversity predicted longitudinal trajectories of low versus high SS. Participants were nonclinically-ascertained young adults comprising normative and elevated scores on schizotypy. SS trajectories were defined in a previous report based on three prospective assessments (23.5, 25, 28 years-old) of both retrospective (Perceived Stress Scale; PSS) and momentary (Experience Sampling Methodology; ESM) stress ratings. A total of n = 177 and n = 165 participants with PSS and ESM stress-sensitivity trajectories, respectively, as well as genetic data, were included in the study. GxE effects between a SS Polygenic Risk Score (PRS-SS) and a Genetic Risk Score of the Hypothalamic Pituitary Adrenal axis (GRS-HPA) with childhood adversity dimensions (Intrafamilial Adversity, Threat and Deprivation) on SS trajectories were examined. Threat was the most consistent predictor of persistently high SS. PRS-SS moderated the association of Threat with high-PSS. GRS-HPA moderated the effects of all adversity dimensions on high-PSS. The interaction of PRS-SS with Deprivation and GRS-HPA with Intrafamilial Adversity predicted trajectories of momentary social stress, but the effects were driven by those with lower genetic susceptibility. Genetic-HPA-axis moderates the effects of all adversity dimensions on persistent SS trajectories, as well as PRS-SS and Threat, particularly for retrospective stress measure. The findings highlight the complex interplay between GxE factors and suggest that PSS may better capture SS trait. Including biologically-meaningful GRS indexing SS and adversity dimensions in future studies using comprehensive stress measures would enhance our knowledge on high SS susceptibility and its relationship with diverse psychopathological outcomes.
KW - stress
KW - adversity-dimensions
KW - genetic risk scores
KW - stress-sensitivity
KW - gene-environment interactions
KW - longitudinal
KW - trait development
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/e99e5536-7b3d-3286-af89-30b076a827f8/
UR - https://ddd.uab.cat/record/303266
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85209126527&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/smi.3499
DO - 10.1002/smi.3499
M3 - Article
C2 - 39540673
SN - 1532-3005
VL - 40
JO - Stress and Health
JF - Stress and Health
IS - 6
M1 - e3499
ER -