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Genetic and environmental influences on human height from infancy through adulthood at different levels of parental education
Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine and Nursing, University of the Basque Country, Bilbao, Spain; Department of Public Health, University of Helsinki, Helsinki.
Örebro University, School of Law, Psychology and Social Work. Department of Psychology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.ORCID iD: 0000-0001-8768-6954
Department of Social Research, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland; Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.
Number of Authors: 732020 (English)In: Scientific Reports, E-ISSN 2045-2322, Vol. 10, no 1, article id 7974Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Genetic factors explain a major proportion of human height variation, but differences in mean stature have also been found between socio-economic categories suggesting a possible effect of environment. By utilizing a classical twin design which allows decomposing the variation of height into genetic and environmental components, we tested the hypothesis that environmental variation in height is greater in offspring of lower educated parents. Twin data from 29 cohorts including 65,978 complete twin pairs with information on height at ages 1 to 69 years and on parental education were pooled allowing the analyses at different ages and in three geographic-cultural regions (Europe, North America and Australia, and East Asia). Parental education mostly showed a positive association with offspring height, with significant associations in mid-childhood and from adolescence onwards. In variance decomposition modeling, the genetic and environmental variance components of height did not show a consistent relation to parental education. A random-effects meta-regression analysis of the aggregate-level data showed a trend towards greater shared environmental variation of height in low parental education families. In conclusion, in our very large dataset from twin cohorts around the globe, these results provide only weak evidence for the study hypothesis.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Nature Publishing Group, 2020. Vol. 10, no 1, article id 7974
National Category
Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology)
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-81929DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-64883-8ISI: 000560040700031PubMedID: 32409744Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85084976337OAI: oai:DiVA.org:oru-81929DiVA, id: diva2:1431074
Funder
Stockholm County CouncilSwedish Heart Lung FoundationSwedish Asthma and Allergy AssociationSwedish Research Council, 2017-00641
Note

Funding Agencies:

Swedish Research Council through the Swedish Initiative for Research on Microdata in the Social And Medical Sciences (SIMSAM)  340-2013-5867

samt ett 30-tal internationella forskningsfinansiärer

Available from: 2020-05-19 Created: 2020-05-19 Last updated: 2022-09-15Bibliographically approved

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Tuvblad, Catherine

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