| Literature DB >> 24944428 |
Riccardo E Marioni1, Gail Davies2, Caroline Hayward3, Dave Liewald4, Shona M Kerr3, Archie Campbell5, Michelle Luciano1, Blair H Smith6, Sandosh Padmanabhan7, Lynne J Hocking8, Nicholas D Hastie3, Alan F Wright3, David J Porteous9, Peter M Visscher10, Ian J Deary1.
Abstract
Education, socioeconomic status, and intelligence are commonly used as predictors of health outcomes, social environment, and mortality. Education and socioeconomic status are typically viewed as environmental variables although both correlate with intelligence, which has a substantial genetic basis. Using data from 6815 unrelated subjects from the Generation Scotland study, we examined the genetic contributions to these variables and their genetic correlations. Subjects underwent genome-wide testing for common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). DNA-derived heritability estimates and genetic correlations were calculated using the 'Genome-wide Complex Trait Analyses' (GCTA) procedures. 21% of the variation in education, 18% of the variation in socioeconomic status, and 29% of the variation in general cognitive ability was explained by variation in common SNPs (SEs ~ 5%). The SNP-based genetic correlations of education and socioeconomic status with general intelligence were 0.95 (SE 0.13) and 0.26 (0.16), respectively. There are genetic contributions to intelligence and education with near-complete overlap between common additive SNP effects on these traits (genetic correlation ~ 1). Genetic influences on socioeconomic status are also associated with the genetic foundations of intelligence. The results are also compatible with substantial environmental contributions to socioeconomic status.Entities:
Keywords: Education; Generation Scotland; Genetics; Intelligence; Socioeconomic status
Year: 2014 PMID: 24944428 PMCID: PMC4051988 DOI: 10.1016/j.intell.2014.02.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intelligence ISSN: 0160-2896
Descriptive data for the (unrelated) genotyped and complete Generation Scotland cohorts.
| (Unrelated) Genotyped Generation Scotland cohort | Complete Generation Scotland cohort | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | n | Mean (SD), N (%), or median (IQR) | Variable | n | Mean (SD), N (%), or median (IQR) | ||
| Age | 6,815 | 57 | 49–63 | Age | 23,673 | 49 | 36–59 |
| Sex — Female | 6,815 | 4,002 | 59 | Sex — Female | 23,673 | 13,904 | 59 |
| Education (years) | 6,578 | Education (years) | 22,406 | ||||
| 0 | 3 | 0.04 | 0 | 11 | 0.04 | ||
| 1–4 | 26 | 0.40 | 1–4 | 67 | 0.30 | ||
| 5–9 | 223 | 3.39 | 5–9 | 702 | 3.13 | ||
| 10–11 | 2,137 | 32.49 | 10–11 | 5,945 | 26.53 | ||
| 12–13 | 1,339 | 20.36 | 12–13 | 4,760 | 21.24 | ||
| 14–15 | 901 | 13.70 | 14–15 | 3,196 | 14.26 | ||
| 16–17 | 1,128 | 17.15 | 16–17 | 4,568 | 20.39 | ||
| 18–19 | 568 | 8.63 | 18–19 | 2,264 | 10.10 | ||
| 20–21 | 177 | 2.69 | 20–21 | 619 | 2.76 | ||
| 22–23 | 49 | 0.74 | 22–23 | 183 | 0.82 | ||
| 24 + | 27 | 0.41 | 24 + | 91 | 0.41 | ||
| SIMD | 6,533 | 4,548 | 2,739–5,548 | SIMD | 20,785 | 4,331 | 2,373–5,461 |
| DST | 6,718 | 68.4 | 16.8 | DST | 20,908 | 72.2 | 17.2 |
| VFT | 6,736 | 41.0 | 12.2 | VFT | 20,895 | 39.7 | 11.7 |
| LM | 6,731 | 30.3 | 7.9 | LM | 20,881 | 31.0 | 8.0 |
| MHVS | 6,694 | 31.2 | 4.7 | MHVS | 20,770 | 30.1 | 4.8 |
SIMD: Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation, DST: Digit Symbol Test, VFT: Verbal Fluency Test, LM: Logical Memory, MHVS: Mill Hill Vocabulary Scale.
Age-, and sex-adjusted phenotypic Pearson correlations (SE).
| g | Education | SIMD | |
|---|---|---|---|
| g | 1 | 0.38 (0.01) | 0.23 (0.01) |
| Education | 0.39 (0.01) | 1 | 0.21 (0.01) |
| SIMD | 0.25 (0.01) | 0.22 (0.01) | 1 |
g: general intelligence derived from principal components analysis, SIMD: Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation.
The correlations for the total population are shown on the upper diagonal; the lower diagonal shows the correlations for the unrelated, genotyped sub-sample.
Univariate and bivariate pedigree and GCTA estimates of heritability.
| Pedigree-based estimates | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | h2 | SE | |||
| g | 20,522 | 0.54 | 0.02 | ||
| Education | 22,406 | 0.41 | 0.02 | ||
| SIMD | 20,785 | 0.71 | 0.01 | ||
| n | rG | SE | rE | biv h2 | |
| g: Education | 20,522:22,406 | 0.65 | 0.02 | 0.12 | 0.78 |
| g SIMD | 20,522:20,785 | 0.40 | 0.02 | − 0.09 | 0.88 |
| Education : SIMD | 22,406:20,785 | 0.48 | 0.02 | − 0.18 | 0.79 |
| SNP-based (GCTA) estimates | |||||
| n | h2 | SE | |||
| g | 6,609 | 0.29 | 0.05 | ||
| Education | 6,578 | 0.21 | 0.05 | ||
| SIMD | 6,533 | 0.18 | 0.05 | ||
| n | rG | SE | rE | biv h2 | |
| g: Education | 6,609:6,578 | 0.95 | 0.13 | 0.21 | 0.59 |
| g: SIMD | 6,609:6,533 | 0.26 | 0.16 | 0.24 | 0.24 |
| Education : SIMD | 6,578:6,533 | 0.45 | 0.18 | 0.16 | 0.41 |
g: general intelligence derived from principal components analysis, SIMD: Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation, h2: narrow-sense heritability, rG: genetic correlation, rE: environmental correlation, biv h2: bivariate heritability.
Age- and sex-adjusted.
Age-, sex-, and population stratification-adjusted.
The univariate estimates give the proportion of variance in the phenotype explained by common genetic variants.