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RESEARCH PRODUCT
G×E Interaction Influences Trajectories of Hand Grip Strength.
Kaare ChristensenKaare ChristensenLene ChristiansenTaina RantanenWilliam S. KremenMatt McgueMatt McgueWendy JohnsonNancy L. PedersenNayla R. HamdiChandra A. ReynoldsRobert F. KruegerCarol E. FranzInge PetersenMatthew S. Panizzonsubject
AdultMaleLongitudinal studyAgingTwinsTwins Monozygotic/geneticsBiologyEnvironmentArticle03 medical and health sciencesGrip strength0302 clinical medicineApolipoproteins ECognitive changeHand strengthGeneticsHumans030212 general & internal medicineHand Strength/physiologyAging/psychologyLongitudinal StudiesGene–environment interactionGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAgedAged 80 and overHand StrengthAge FactorsGrowth curve (biology)Twins MonozygoticMiddle AgedTwin studyGene-environment interactionkaksosetGrip strengthFemaleGene-Environment InteractionApolipoproteins E/genetics030217 neurology & neurosurgeryAPOEDemographydescription
Age-related decline in grip strength predicts later life disability, frailty, lower well-being and cognitive change. While grip strength is heritable, genetic influence on change in grip strength has been relatively ignored, with non-shared environmental influence identified as the primary contributor in a single longitudinal study. The extent to which gene-environment interplay, particularly gene-environment interactions, contributes to grip trajectories has yet to be examined. We considered longitudinal grip strength measurements in seven twin studies of aging in the Interplay of Genes and Environment across Multiple Studies consortium. Growth curve parameters were estimated for same-sex pairs, aged 34-99 (N = 10,681). Fisher's test for mixture distribution of within-monozygotic twin-pair differences (N = 1724) was performed on growth curve parameters. We observed significant gene-environment interaction on grip strength trajectories. Finally, we compared the variability of within-pair differences of growth curve parameters by APOE haplotypes. Though not statistically significant, the results suggested that APOE ɛ2ɛ2/ɛ2ɛ3 haplotypes might buffer environmental influences on grip strength trajectories. Age-related decline in grip strength predicts later life disability, frailty, lower well-being and cognitive change. While grip strength is heritable, genetic influence on change in grip strength has been relatively ignored, with non-shared environmental influence identified as the primary contributor in a single longitudinal study. The extent to which gene-environment interplay, particularly gene-environment interactions, contributes to grip trajectories has yet to be examined. We considered longitudinal grip strength measurements in seven twin studies of aging in the Interplay of Genes and Environment across Multiple Studies consortium. Growth curve parameters were estimated for same-sex pairs, aged 34-99 (N = 10,681). Fisher's test for mixture distribution of within-monozygotic twin-pair differences (N = 1724) was performed on growth curve parameters. We observed significant gene-environment interaction on grip strength trajectories. Finally, we compared the variability of within-pair differences of growth curve parameters by APOE haplotypes. Though not statistically significant, the results suggested that APOE ɛ2ɛ2/ɛ2ɛ3 haplotypes might buffer environmental influences on grip strength trajectories.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-01-01 | Behavior genetics |