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An interaction between early threat exposure and the oxytocin receptor in females: Disorder-specific versus general risk for psychopathology and social–emotional mediators

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2020

Amy L. Byrd*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Irene Tung
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Stephen D. Manuck
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Vera Vine
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Michelle Horner
Affiliation:
Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA
Alison E. Hipwell
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Stephanie D. Stepp
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
*
Author for correspondence: Amy L. Byrd, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA; E-mail: alb202@pitt.edu.
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Abstract

Early threat exposure is a transdiagnostic risk factor for psychopathology, and evidence suggests that genetic variation in the oxytocin receptor (OXTR) moderates this association. However, it is unclear if this gene-by-environment (G×E) interaction is tied to unique risk for disorder-specific outcomes or instead increases shared risk for general psychopathology. Moreover, little is known about how this G×E interaction increases risk. The current study utilized a prospective, longitudinal sample of females (n = 2,020) to examine: (a) whether the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation (rs53576, rs2254298) confers risk for disorder-specific outcomes (depression, anxiety, borderline and antisocial personality disorders) and/or general psychopathology in early adulthood; and (b) whether social–emotional deficits (emotion dysregulation, callousness, attachment quality) during adolescence constitute mediating mechanisms. Consistent with hypotheses, the interactive effects of early threat exposure and OXTR variation (rs53576) predicted general psychopathology, with threat-exposed women carrying at least one copy of the rs53576 A-allele at greatest risk. This interaction was mediated via emotional dysregulation in adolescence, with threat-exposed A-allele carriers demonstrating greater emotion dysregulation, and greater emotion dysregulation predicting general psychopathology in early adulthood. Findings suggest that this G×E places women at risk for a broad range of psychopathology via effects on emotion dysregulation.

Type
Regular Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press

Overview

Childhood maltreatment, specifically early threat exposure (e.g., experiencing violence or abuse), is a transdiagnostic risk factor for later psychopathology (Cicchetti & Toth, Reference Cicchetti and Toth2005; Kessler et al., Reference Kessler, McLaughlin, Green, Gruber, Sampson, Zaslavsky and Angermeyer2010), and emerging evidence suggests that genetic variation in the oxytocin receptor (OXTR) may moderate this association (Cicchetti, Rogosch, Hecht, Crick, & Hetzel, Reference Cicchetti, Rogosch, Hecht, Crick and Hetzel2014). Given the well-documented impact of early threat exposure and oxytocin on neurobiological systems supporting social–emotional development (Donadon, Martin-Santos, & Osório, Reference Donadon, Martin-Santos and Osório2018), it is not surprising that this gene-by-environment (G×E) interaction has been implicated in a wide range of disorders characterized by social–emotional deficits (i.e., depression, anxiety, borderline personality disorder (BPD) and antisocial personality disorder (ASPD); McQuaid, McInnis, Abizaid, & Anisman, Reference McQuaid, McInnis, Abizaid and Anisman2014; Myers et al., Reference Myers, Williams, Gatt, McAuley-Clark, Dobson-Stone, Schofield and Nemeroff2014; Steele & Siever, Reference Steele and Siever2010). However, it is unclear whether this G×E interaction is tied to unique risk for disorder-specific outcomes, or whether it increases shared risk for general psychopathology. Moreover, very little is known about how this G×E interaction functions to increase risk. Research suggests that social–emotional deficits like emotion dysregulation, callousness, and poor attachment quality may function as mediating mechanisms linking the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation with psychopathology in adulthood (e.g., Bradley et al., Reference Bradley, Westen, Mercer, Binder, Jovanovic, Crain and Heim2011; Dadds et al., Reference Dadds, Moul, Cauchi, Dobson-Stone, Hawes, Brennan and Ebstein2014; McQuaid, McInnis, Stead, Matheson, & Anisman, Reference McQuaid, McInnis, Stead, Matheson and Anisman2013). However, these putative intermediate behavioral phenotypes have yet to be examined simultaneously, and never as mediators of the association between this G×E interaction and disorder-specific versus general risk for psychopathology.

To extend the current literature and improve the characterization of this developmental risk pathway, the current study seeks to: (a) examine whether the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation (rs53576, rs2254298) confers risk for disorder-specific outcomes and/or for general psychopathology, and (b) assess whether individual variability in social–emotional deficits (emotion dysregulation, callousness, and quality of attachment) during adolescence constitutes potential mediating mechanisms connecting this G×E interaction with disorder-specific and/or general risk for psychopathology in early adulthood. In light of research suggesting that early threat exposure affects the oxytocin system in a sex-dependent way (Cicchetti et al., Reference Cicchetti, Rogosch, Hecht, Crick and Hetzel2014; Israel et al., Reference Israel, Lerer, Shalev, Uzefovsky, Riebold, Laiba and Knafo2009; Seltzer, Ziegler, Connolly, Prososki, & Pollak, Reference Seltzer, Ziegler, Connolly, Prososki and Pollak2014), we examined these questions in a large, at-risk sample of females assessed prospectively from childhood through early adulthood.

Early threat exposure and risk for psychopathology

Recent research highlights the importance of differentiating between distinct dimensions of maltreatment (e.g., threat exposure vs. deprivation) when examining risk for psychopathology, as the specific mechanisms through which these experiences influence development vary (Cicchetti & Manly, Reference Cicchetti and Manly2001; McLaughlin, Sheridan, & Lambert, Reference McLaughlin, Sheridan and Lambert2014b; Sheridan & McLaughlin, Reference Sheridan and McLaughlin2014). Along these lines, early threat exposure, defined as any experience involving harm or threat of harm (i.e., witnessing and/or experiencing violence or abuse), has been linked to profound disruptions in the stress–response system (Tarullo & Gunnar, Reference Tarullo and Gunnar2006; Teicher et al., Reference Teicher, Andersen, Polcari, Anderson, Navalta and Kim2003). Specifically, research suggests that threat exposure in childhood influences the development of cortico–limbic circuits that underlie social and emotional learning processes (McCrory et al., Reference McCrory, De Brito, Sebastian, Mechelli, Bird, Kelly and Viding2011), and disrupts physiological and subjective responses to environmental stressors (Cicchetti, Reference Cicchetti2016; Cicchetti & Toth, Reference Cicchetti and Toth2005; Perry, Pollard, Blakley, Baker, & Vigilante, Reference Perry, Pollard, Blakley, Baker and Vigilante1995). Not surprisingly, decades of research have consistently linked early threat exposure to the emergence of psychiatric disorders characterized by marked deficits in social and emotional processing, namely depression, anxiety, and personality disorders such as BPD and ASPD (Heim & Nemeroff, Reference Heim and Nemeroff2001; Jaffee, Caspi, Moffitt, & Taylor, Reference Jaffee, Caspi, Moffitt and Taylor2004; Johnson, Cohen, Brown, Smailes, & Bernstein, Reference Johnson, Cohen, Brown, Smailes and Bernstein1999; Rogosch & Cicchetti, Reference Rogosch and Cicchetti2005; Stepp, Lazarus, & Byrd, Reference Stepp, Lazarus and Byrd2016). Moreover, risk for these disorders substantially increases as threat exposures become more chronic (Anda et al., Reference Anda, Felitti, Bremner, Walker, Whitfield, Perry and Giles2006; Hughes et al., Reference Hughes, Bellis, Hardcastle, Sethi, Butchart, Mikton and Dunne2017; Manly, Kim, Rogosch, & Cicchetti, Reference Manly, Kim, Rogosch and Cicchetti2001; Mersky, Topitzes, & Reynolds, Reference Mersky, Topitzes and Reynolds2013), emphasizing the importance of prospective assessments that account for chronicity when examining experiences of threat exposure over time (e.g., Cowell, Cicchetti, Rogosch, & Toth, Reference Cowell, Cicchetti, Rogosch and Toth2015; Jaffee & Maikovich-Fong, Reference Jaffee and Maikovich-Fong2011).

Robust associations between threat exposure and disorder-specific outcomes have emerged primarily from studies examining these disorders in isolation (Heim & Nemeroff, Reference Heim and Nemeroff2001; Jaffee et al., Reference Jaffee, Caspi, Moffitt and Taylor2004; Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Cohen, Brown, Smailes and Bernstein1999; Rogosch & Cicchetti, Reference Rogosch and Cicchetti2005; Stepp et al., Reference Stepp, Lazarus and Byrd2016). This leaves unanswered questions about the extent to which threat exposure is tied to unique risk for disorder-specific outcomes or instead linked to risk for general psychopathology. A growing body of work suggests that the impact of early threat exposure may be largely nonspecific, and therefore better understood as a shared liability for the development of a wide range of psychopathologies (Eaton et al., Reference Eaton, Krueger, Keyes, Skodol, Markon, Grant and Hasin2011; Green et al., Reference Green, McLaughlin, Berglund, Gruber, Sampson, Zaslavsky and Kessler2010; Kessler et al., Reference Kessler, McLaughlin, Green, Gruber, Sampson, Zaslavsky and Angermeyer2010; Keyes et al., Reference Keyes, Eaton, Krueger, McLaughlin, Wall, Grant and Hasin2012; McLaughlin et al., Reference McLaughlin, Green, Gruber, Sampson, Zaslavsky and Kessler2012). Along these lines, recent theoretical and empirical work supports a general factor of psychopathology (Caspi et al., Reference Caspi, Houts, Belsky, Goldman-Mellor, Harrington, Israel and Moffitt2014; Laceulle, Vollebergh, & Ormel, Reference Laceulle, Vollebergh and Ormel2015; Lahey et al., Reference Lahey, Applegate, Hakes, Zald, Hariri and Rathouz2012, Reference Lahey, Rathouz, Keenan, Stepp, Loeber and Hipwell2015)—termed the “p factor”—that likely reflects a shared etiology. Thus, there is growing interest in better understanding how early risk factors, like threat exposure, may contribute to an overall latent vulnerability to psychopathology (Kotov et al., Reference Kotov, Krueger, Watson, Achenbach, Althoff, Bagby and Clark2017; Lahey, Van Hulle, Singh, Waldman, & Rathouz, Reference Lahey, Van Hulle, Singh, Waldman and Rathouz2011; Lahey et al., Reference Lahey, Applegate, Hakes, Zald, Hariri and Rathouz2012; Tackett et al., Reference Tackett, Lahey, Van Hulle, Waldman, Krueger and Rathouz2013), as such an approach has the potential to further clarify shared risk mechanisms (McLaughlin et al., Reference McLaughlin, Sheridan and Lambert2014b; Sheridan & McLaughlin, Reference Sheridan and McLaughlin2014).

Along these lines, research suggests that moderating influences of polymorphic variation in the gene encoding the OXTR may play a role in this developmental risk pathway. Importantly, OXTR variation may help to explain why only some youth who experience early threat exposure go on to develop psychopathology (Cicchetti, Reference Cicchetti2013; Jaffee et al., Reference Jaffee, Caspi, Moffitt, Dodge, Rutter, Taylor and Tully2005), particularly with regard to the development of disorders characterized by social–emotional deficits (McQuaid et al., Reference McQuaid, McInnis, Abizaid and Anisman2014; Myers et al., Reference Myers, Williams, Gatt, McAuley-Clark, Dobson-Stone, Schofield and Nemeroff2014; Steele & Siever, Reference Steele and Siever2010). OXTR variation plays a central role in the development and functioning of social and emotional processing (see below). Thus, it is possible that the synergistic effects of both early threat exposure and OXTR variation increase one's vulnerability for developing later psychopathology via shared risk mechanisms.

OXTR variation as a moderator of risk for psychopathology

There is growing evidence that OXTR variation moderates the association between early threat exposure and the emergence of mood, anxiety, and personality disorders (e.g., Cicchetti et al., Reference Cicchetti, Rogosch, Hecht, Crick and Hetzel2014; Hammen, Bower, & Cole, Reference Hammen, Bower and Cole2015; Hostinar, Cicchetti, & Rogosch, Reference Hostinar, Cicchetti and Rogosch2014; Thompson, Parker, Hallmayer, Waugh, & Gotlib, Reference Thompson, Parker, Hallmayer, Waugh and Gotlib2011). Like early threat exposure, oxytocin significantly impacts the development of the stress-response system, and this regulatory neuropeptide continues to influence our physiological, emotional, and behavioral responses throughout the lifespan (Carter, Reference Carter2014, Reference Carter2003). Oxytocin is synthesized in the hypothalamus and, in addition to subsequent pituitary release into the peripheral circulation, oxytocin-releasing neurons project widely throughout the brain. The OXTR is highly concentrated in limbic regions (e.g., amygdala, hippocampus) and autonomic centers in the brainstem, which is not surprising given their influence on the functioning of physiological systems underlying the regulation of emotions and complex social behaviors (Neumann, Reference Neumann2008).

Molecular variation in the gene encoding the OXTR, located on chromosome 3p25.3, has been shown to interact with early threat exposure to predict a range of psychopathologies characterized by emotional and social deficits (Kumsta & Heinrichs, Reference Kumsta and Heinrichs2013). Two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have emerged as particularly promising candidates and represent two of the most well-researched OXTR genotypes: rs53576 (A/G), located within intron 3, and rs2254298 (A/G), located within the 3I untranslated region (Bakermans-Kranenburg & van IJzendoorn, Reference Bakermans-Kranenburg and van IJzendoorn2014; Kumsta & Heinrichs, Reference Kumsta and Heinrichs2013; Toepfer et al., Reference Toepfer, Heim, Entringer, Binder, Wadhwa and Buss2017). Variation in these SNPs has been linked to significantly higher levels of depression and anxiety in the context of early adversity (Hostinar et al., Reference Hostinar, Cicchetti and Rogosch2014; Myers et al., Reference Myers, Williams, Gatt, McAuley-Clark, Dobson-Stone, Schofield and Nemeroff2014; Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Parker, Hallmayer, Waugh and Gotlib2011), as well as higher BPD symptoms (Cicchetti et al., Reference Cicchetti, Rogosch, Hecht, Crick and Hetzel2014; Hammen et al., Reference Hammen, Bower and Cole2015) and higher ASPD symptoms (Malik, Zai, Abu, Nowrouzi, & Beitchman, Reference Malik, Zai, Abu, Nowrouzi and Beitchman2012; Smearman, Winiarski, Brennan, Najman, & Johnson, Reference Smearman, Winiarski, Brennan, Najman and Johnson2015). While these studies provide support for the role of the OXTR in this developmental risk pathway, it is unclear whether genetic variation in the OXTR moderates risk for disorder-specific outcomes (as outlined above) or instead functions to increase risk for a shared liability in the development of a range of psychopathology.

Notably, findings are inconsistent regarding which OXTR genotypes confer greater vulnerability for psychopathology in the presence of early threat exposure. Studies examining rs2254298 have consistently documented A-allele carriers as more susceptible to threat exposure, though the notably larger body of empirical work examining the moderating effects of rs53576 has been more mixed (i.e., higher susceptibility in GG homozygotes vs. A-allele carriers; for review see Toepfer et al., Reference Toepfer, Heim, Entringer, Binder, Wadhwa and Buss2017). There is some suggestion that sex-dependent differences in OTXR allelic risk may contribute to these discrepancies. Though the majority of research in this area has focused on male or undifferentiated samples, studies stratified by gender have shown sex-dependent associations for rs53576, with male GG homozygotes and female A-allele carriers showing higher levels of psychopathology in the presence of early threat exposure (see Cicchetti et al., Reference Cicchetti, Rogosch, Hecht, Crick and Hetzel2014 for an example). Moreover, studies with predominantly female samples have shown rs53576 A-allele carriers to be most at risk for psychopathology (Hammen et al., Reference Hammen, Bower and Cole2015; McInnis, McQuaid, Matheson, & Anisman, Reference McInnis, McQuaid, Matheson and Anisman2015; Thompson, Hammen, Starr, & Najman, Reference Thompson, Hammen, Starr and Najman2014), suggesting that, like rs2254298, female rs53576 A-allele carriers may be more vulnerable to the negative effects of early threat exposure. While the exact mechanisms underlying sex-dependent oxytocinergic functioning continue to be investigated, this research echoes a larger body of literature suggesting that the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR may function differently in males versus females (see Seltzer et al., Reference Seltzer, Ziegler, Connolly, Prososki and Pollak2014). Taken together, these findings highlight the importance of accounting for sex when examining this developmental risk pathway and expanding the literature to include female samples.

Social–emotional deficits as potential mediators

Although recent research has identified allelic variation in the OXTR as a moderator of the association between early threat exposure and later psychopathology, very little is known about how this G×E interaction functions to increase psychopathology risk. The examination of intermediate behavioral phenotypes as mediating mechanisms has the potential to further elucidate this developmental risk pathway (Dodge, Reference Dodge2009; Kumsta & Heinrichs, Reference Kumsta and Heinrichs2013). Given the synergistic influence of threat exposure and oxytocin on social–emotional development (Donadon et al., Reference Donadon, Martin-Santos and Osório2018; Kumsta & Heinrichs, Reference Kumsta and Heinrichs2013), deficits within this domain have received growing attention. As described above, early threat exposure and oxytocin significantly impact the stress-response system, and disruption within this system has been linked to specific social–emotional deficits such as difficulties with social–emotional processing and regulation, as well as attachment quality (Carter, Reference Carter2014, Reference Carter2003; Tarullo & Gunnar, Reference Tarullo and Gunnar2006; Teicher et al., Reference Teicher, Andersen, Polcari, Anderson, Navalta and Kim2003). Importantly, these deficits are robust indicators of risk for later psychopathology, underscoring the need for continued research in this area (Tabak, Reference Tabak2013).

Indeed, research examining early threat exposure and OXTR variation in isolation has shown associations with social–emotional deficits strongly implicated in psychopathology (Dadds et al., Reference Dadds, Moul, Cauchi, Dobson-Stone, Hawes, Brennan and Ebstein2014; Kim & Cicchetti, Reference Kim and Cicchetti2010; Kumsta & Heinrichs, Reference Kumsta and Heinrichs2013; Maughan & Cicchetti, Reference Maughan and Cicchetti2002). Three specific social–emotional deficits—emotion dysregulation, callousness, and poor attachment quality—have received growing attention in the literature as putative endophenotypes. Threat exposure and OXTR variation have been independently linked to increased sensitivity to stress as evidenced by higher physiological reactivity and emotion dysregulation, as well as to social skills deficits like callousness, and to measures of attachment quality, such as reduced trust (Krueger et al., Reference Krueger, Parasuraman, Iyengar, Thornburg, Weel, Lin and Lipsky2012; Kumsta & Heinrichs, Reference Kumsta and Heinrichs2013; Rodrigues, Saslow, Garcia, John, & Keltner, Reference Rodrigues, Saslow, Garcia, John and Keltner2009). Further, emerging research shows that the combined effects of these risk factors (i.e., G×E interaction) increases emotion dysregulation (Bradley et al., Reference Bradley, Westen, Mercer, Binder, Jovanovic, Crain and Heim2011) and callousness (Verona, Murphy, & Bresin, Reference Verona, Murphy and Bresin2018) as well as poor quality of attachment (McQuaid et al., Reference McQuaid, McInnis, Stead, Matheson and Anisman2013). These deficits often peak during adolescence (Blakemore & Choudhury, Reference Blakemore and Choudhury2006; Casey, Jones, & Hare, Reference Casey, Jones and Hare2008), a critical period for social–emotional development (Steinberg, Reference Steinberg2005; Steinberg & Morris, Reference Steinberg and Morris2001), and increased levels during this sensitive window have been linked to risk for mood, anxiety, and personality disorders (Buist, Deković, Meeus, & van Aken, Reference Buist, Deković, Meeus and van Aken2004; Cole, Michel, & Teti, Reference Cole, Michel and Teti1994; Frick & White, Reference Frick and White2008). However, research has yet to examine these social–emotional deficits simultaneously as potential intermediate behavioral phenotypes linking the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation with disorder-specific and/or general risk for psychopathology.

Current study

The current study sought to replicate and extend prior work by examining whether the interaction between threat exposure in childhood and OXTR variation (rs53576, rs2254298) confers risk for disorder-specific outcomes and/or general psychopathology in young adulthood. Additionally, the current study examined whether social–emotional factors (emotion dysregulation, callousness, and attachment quality) in adolescence constitute potential mediating mechanisms connecting the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation to psychopathology. Importantly, the present study addresses these questions in a large, urban female sample that has been comprehensively assessed from childhood into early adulthood. Assessments include annual comprehensive multi-informant reports of multiple early threat exposures throughout childhood, social–emotional deficits during adolescence, and mood, anxiety and personality disorder symptoms in early adulthood.

We hypothesized that the interactive effects of early threat exposure and OXTR variation would be predictive of a shared liability for “general” psychopathology. Specifically, we predicted that threat-exposed women with at least one copy of the A allele (AA/AG) of either rs53576 or rs2254298 would show the highest levels of the “general” psychopathology factor in early adulthood. We also predicted that the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation would increase risk for general psychopathology (vs. disorder-specific outcomes) via the impact on social–emotional development during adolescence. That is, threat-exposed, A-allele carriers would show higher levels of social–emotional deficits in adolescence, putting them at increased risk for “general” psychopathology in early adulthood.

Finally, because this study extends from one of two strands of contemporary G×E research, some justification for the approach employed here is warranted, beyond its obvious provenance in a corresponding literature. The first strand of GxE research, or the candidate gene G×E approach, proceeds from fundamentally biological considerations, hence drawing “candidate” gene polymorphisms from plausible pathways of developmental influence. In this sense, it is hypothesis driven, but necessarily constrained in selection of genetic variants for study. Thus, one frequently cited limitation of the candidate G×E approach is its limited coverage of potentially relevant genetic variation, often coupled with reliance on small study samples and attendant failures of replication (Dick et al., Reference Dick, Agrawal, Keller, Adkins, Aliev, Monroe and Sher2015; Duncan & Keller, Reference Duncan and Keller2011). Still, it is not the case that candidate or single-gene G×E studies never replicate or fail on meta-analytic review (Bakermans-Kranenburg & Van Ijzendoorn, Reference Bakermans-Kranenburg and Van Ijzendoorn2011, Reference Bakermans-Kranenburg and Van Ijzendoorn2015; Byrd & Manuck, Reference Byrd and Manuck2014; Hartman, Widaman, & Belsky, Reference Hartman, Widaman and Belsky2015; Kilpeläinen et al., Reference Kilpeläinen, Qi, Brage, Sharp, Sonestedt, Demerath and Sandholt2011; Wang, Shelton, & Dwivedi, Reference Wang, Shelton and Dwivedi2018; Zhao et al., Reference Zhao, Chen, Yang, Han, Fang, Qiu and Wang2018). The second strand of G×E research draws on the power of genome-wide association (GWA) to identify variants of phenotypic association at high levels of statistical significance, which may then be aggregated into polygenic scores (Bogdan, Baranger, & Agrawal, Reference Bogdan, Baranger and Agrawal2018). The latter may be constructed as well from all genetic variants typed on a GWA microarray, thus also incorporating predictive variants undetectable at individual loci. Such polygenic scores will account for a larger portion of phenotypic variation, both as main effects and, in principle (as there are yet few examples), when moderated by candidate environmental factors (G×E). A limitation of this approach is that because few GWA-identified variants have known functionality, their use in G×E research lacks mechanistic rationale and rests on the uncertain assumption that all phenotype-associated polymorphisms (whatever their biological actions) interact in unison and uniformly with the same environmental moderator. At present, then, molecular G×E research is split between two approaches, neither without limitations. In that context, we believe continued research in the first tradition remains warranted, with the understanding that the present study, like all such work, ultimately demands replication and gains credence by consilience with the literatures giving rise to it.

Method

Sample

Participants were drawn from the Pittsburgh Girls Study (PGS), an ongoing longitudinal study of 2,450 women that began when they were 5- to 8-years old. Girls were identified by a stratified sampling strategy that included a total of 103,238 households in Pittsburgh, where households in low-income neighborhoods were over-sampled. Of those girls initially identified, 2,876 were asked to take part in the longitudinal study, and a total of 2,450 (85.2%) girls agreed to participate. At the time of the first interview, the sample comprised 588 5-year olds, 630 6-year olds, 611 7-year olds, and 622 8-year olds, of whom 41.2% were Caucasian and over half were racial minorities (52.9% African American; 4.9% multi-racial, <1% Asian).Footnote 1 Girls and their caregivers (92.9% biological mothers) were interviewed annually, and at the time of analyses girls had been interviewed through age 22. Participant retention was over 85% at each assessment. Further demographic information can be found in Hipwell et al. (Reference Hipwell, Loeber, Stouthamer-Loeber, Keenan, White and Kroneman2002).

Procedure

Separate in-home interviews for both the girl and the caregiver were conducted annually by trained interviewers using a laptop computer. Analyses for the current study utilize data collected during childhood (ages 5 to 11 years), adolescence (ages 13 to 17 years) and early adulthood (ages 18 to 22 years). When participants were between the ages of 15 and 20, DNA was isolated from saliva samples using the Oragene DNA self-collection kit following manufacturer instructions (DNA Genotek Inc., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada). Procedures were reviewed and approved by the Institutional Review Board at the University of Pittsburgh. Written informed consent was obtained from caregivers and/or girls prior to each assessment. Families were compensated for their participation.

DNA extraction and genotyping

Genotyping of the OXTR SNPs rs53576 (A/G) and rs2254298 (A/G) was performed using the Agena iPlex platform (Agena Bioscience, San Diego, California). Following multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR), allele adjacent Extend primers are subjected to single base extension. Extension products are analyzed on the Agena MassArray®. Agena Typer® software compares the known mass of the extension primers to identify each locus and the increase caused by each distinct nucleotide to identify the alleles present in each sample. Genotypes are assigned by peak analysis in TyperAnalyzer 4.0.

Overall, 84.6% and 85.2% of the sample provided genetic information for rs53576 and rs2254298, respectively, and 96.7% of this sample were successfully genotyped. This yielded a final sample of 794 Caucasians and 1,210 African Americans for rs53576, and 805 Caucasians and 1,215 African Americans for rs2254298. The distribution of OXTR genotypes for both SNPs conformed to Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium in the Caucasian (ps > 0.30) and African American samples (ps > 0.30). Consistent with prior reports (e.g., Lerer et al., Reference Lerer, Levi, Salomon, Darvasi, Yirmiya and Ebstein2008), alleles were not found to be in linkage disequilibrium (LD; D1 = 0.18; r 2 = .002). In line with previous research (e.g., Cicchetti et al., Reference Cicchetti, Rogosch, Hecht, Crick and Hetzel2014) and given the low frequency of AA genotype in both SNPs (<10%), rs53576 and rs2254298 genotypes were grouped by presence of any A allele (rs53576: n = 925, 46%; rs2254298: n = 625, 31%) versus GG (rs53576: n = 1082, 54%; rs2254298: n = 1398, 69%; see Supplemental Table S1). Based on evidence suggesting racial–ethnic variation in the OXTR allele frequencies (Creswell et al., Reference Creswell, Wright, Troxel, Ferrell, Flory and Manuck2014; Butovskaya et al., Reference Butovskaya, Lazebny, Sukhodolskaya, Vasiliev, Dronova, Fedenok and Butovskaya2016), all analyses included race as a covariate, and secondary analyses were conducted separately by race.

Genetic data were unavailable for 443 participants, including 376 participants whose genetic data were not collected due to inability to recontact or refusal to provide genetic data, 56 participants who provided saliva samples after genotyping had concluded, and 13 participants whose genetic data were unusable due to laboratory error. Girls without genetic data (n = 443) were compared to participants included in primary analyses for all study variables. Girls without genetic data were more likely to be Caucasian (χ2 = 12.16, p < .05) and less likely to experience early threat exposure (χ2 = 16.31, p < .05). Additionally, girls without genetic data reported greater BPD symptom severity at ages 18 (t = 2.71, p < .05) and 19 (t = 2.80, p < .05), greater depression symptom severity at age 19 (t = 2.18, p < .05), and greater anxiety symptom severity at ages 18 (t = 2.80, p < .05) and 19 (t = 3.37, p < .05). Finally, girls without genetic data reported higher levels of emotion dysregulation during adolescence (t = 2.55, p < .05).

Measures

Early threat exposure

Consistent with previous research (McLaughlin et al., Reference McLaughlin, Sheridan and Lambert2014b; Sheridan & McLaughlin, Reference Sheridan and McLaughlin2014), the current study defined early threat exposure as any experience involving harm or threat of harm, including observing community violence, witnessing domestic violence, and being the victim of physical, emotional or sexual abuse, that occurred prior to age 12. To assess this construct comprehensively, we utilized all available data reflecting threat exposure, including three dichotomous indicators (whether or not participants experienced community violence, domestic violence, and/or sexual abuse), and one continuous indicator (harsh physical and emotional punishment). A chronicity index of early threat exposure was derived based on the number of years participants reported experiencing any of the threat experiences (0 = none; 1 = 1 year; 2 = 2 years; 3 = 3+years) in line with research suggesting that risk for psychopathology substantially increases as threat exposure becomes more chronic (Anda et al., Reference Anda, Felitti, Bremner, Walker, Whitfield, Perry and Giles2006; Hughes et al., Reference Hughes, Bellis, Hardcastle, Sethi, Butchart, Mikton and Dunne2017; Manly et al., Reference Manly, Kim, Rogosch and Cicchetti2001; Mersky et al., Reference Mersky, Topitzes and Reynolds2013). In order to count the number of years during which any experience of threat exposure occurred, we dichotomized our sole continuous variable (harsh physical and emotional punishment). Although we realize the inherent limitations of this approach (e.g., loss of information; see MacCallum, Zhang, Preacher, & Rucker, Reference MacCallum, Zhang, Preacher and Rucker2002), this method allowed us to retain the rich information provided by all four indicators of threat exposure. Details on each of these indicators and their prevalence within the sample (n = 2,020) are described below. Prior to the age of 12, approximately 20% of the sample had been exposed to threat during 1 year, 10% was exposed during 2 years, and 12% was exposed during 3 or more years.

First, exposure to community violence was assessed annually by asking parents if their child (a) witnessed any violent crime and/or (b) was a victim of any violent crime. Second, exposure to domestic violence was assessed via prospective caregiver reports of domestic violence in the home using four items from the Conflict Tactics Scale-Revised (CTS2; Straus, Hamby, Boney-McCoy, & Sugarman, Reference Straus, Hamby, Boney-McCoy and Sugarman1996) and two items from the Difficult Life Circumstances Scale (DLC; Barnard, Johnson, Booth, & Bee, Reference Barnard, Johnson, Booth and Bee1994). Nineteen percent of girls were characterized as having been exposed to violence. Third, harsh physical and emotional punishment was assessed annually via caregiver reports on six items of the harsh punishment subscale (e.g., “I spank or hit her,” “I swear or curse at her,” “I say I will send her away”) from the Conflict Tactics Scale-Parent/Child Version (CTSPC; Straus, Hamby, Finkelhor, Moore, & Runyan, Reference Straus, Hamby, Finkelhor, Moore and Runyan1998), and girls scoring in the top decile (10%) were classified as experiencing harsh punishment. Finally, sexual abuse was assessed prospectively at ages 10 and 11 via child report on six items from the Abuse Questionnaire (Hipwell, Murray, Xiong, Stepp, & Keenan, Reference Hipwell, Murray, Xiong, Stepp and Keenan2016) and the Child Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder symptom scale (CPSS; Foa, Johnson, Feeny, & Treadwell, Reference Foa, Johnson, Feeny and Treadwell2001). Less than 1% of girls reported experiencing sexual abuse.

Early adult outcomes

All early adult outcomes were assessed annually from ages 18 through 22 using the Adult Self-Report Index (ASRI; Gadow, Sprafkin, & Weiss, Reference Gadow, Sprafkin and Weiss2004). All symptoms were rated on a 4-point Likert scale (0 = never, 1 = sometimes, 2 = a lot and 3 = all the time), and items specific to each disorder (described below) were summed to create a total severity score for each age (18–22). Summed scores for each age (18–22) were then utilized to create latent factors representing both general and specific factors in early adulthood (see analysis section for more detail).

Depression

Participants reported annually on the past-year severity of the ten depression symptoms (e.g., “felt depressed,” “thought about death,” “felt worthless”; range = 0 to 29). The internal consistency for this scale was good at each time point (α range = .87 to .89).

Anxiety

Participants reported annually on the past-year severity of the eight generalized anxiety disorder symptoms (e.g., “worried about bad thing,” “trouble stopping worry,” “felt nervous”; range = 0 to 24). The internal consistency for this scale was good at each time point (α range = .86 to .89).

Borderline personality disorder

Participants reported annually on the past-year severity of the nine BPD symptoms (e.g., affective instability, inappropriate or intense anger, recurrent suicide behavior, frantic efforts to avoid abandonment; range = 0 to 23). The internal consistency for this scale was good at each time point (α range = .79 to .84).

Antisocial personality disorder

Participants reported annually on the past-year severity of the seven ASPD symptoms (e.g., repeatedly performing acts that are grounds for arrest, aggression, impulsivity; range = 0 to 15). The internal consistency for this scale this was acceptable at each time point (α range = .75 to .78).

Social–emotional mediators

Emotion dysregulation

Emotion dysregulation was assessed annually from ages 14–17 using the affective instability subscale of the seven-item Personality Assessment Inventory-Borderline Features (PAI-BOR; Morey, Reference Morey2007). Participants rated items (e.g., “mood can shift quite suddenly,” “moods can get quite intense,” “has little control over anger,” “times when so mad, could not do enough to express all anger”) on a 4-point Likert scale (1 = false, 2 = slightly true, 3 = mainly true, or 4 = very true). Total scores were created by summing all items each year, and these scores were averaged across adolescence. The internal consistency for this scale was acceptable at each time point (α range = .73 to .79).

Callousness

Callousness was assessed annually from ages 13–17 using six items from the parent-reported Antisocial Processes Screening Device (APSD; Frick & Hare, Reference Frick and Hare2001). Caregivers rated items (i.e., “feels bad or guilty when she does something wrong,” “does not show her emotions to others,” “concerned about the feelings of others,” “concerned about doing well in school,” “is good at keeping promises,” “keeps the same friends”) on a 3-point Likert scale (0 = not at all true to 2 = definitely true). Total scores were created by summing all items for each year, and these scores were averaged across adolescence. The internal consistency for this scale ranged from low to adequate at each time point (α range = .57 to .61), consistent with previous studies that have used this scale (Hipwell et al., Reference Hipwell, Pardini, Loeber, Sembower, Keenan and Stouthamer-Loeber2007; Pardini, Lochman, & Frick, Reference Pardini, Lochman and Frick2003).

Quality of attachment

Perceived quality of attachment was assessed annually from ages 13–17 using the ten item Trust subscale from the Revised Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachment (IPPA-R; Gullone & Robinson, Reference Gullone and Robinson2005). Participants reported on their trust in the availability and sensitivity of their primary caregiver and their perception of mutual understanding and respect in the relationship (i.e., “My parents respect my feelings,” “My parents accept me as I am,” “When I talk about things with my parents they listen to what I think,” “My parents listen to my opinions,” “My parents understand me,” “I trust my parents,” “When I am angry about something, my parents try to understand,” “My parents are good parents,” “I wish I had different parents”) using a 3-point Likert scale (1 = never true, 2 = sometimes true, 3 = always true). Items were worded to reflect the adolescent's perception of the primary caregiver and their relationship. One item, “My parents expect too much from me,” was not administered because it had the lowest factor loading on the Trust factor and the lowest item–total correlation in previous studies (Armsden & Greenberg, Reference Armsden and Greenberg1987). This scale has been utilized in previous work to assess perceived quality of attachment (Scott et al., Reference Scott, Whalen, Zalewski, Beeney, Pilkonis, Hipwell and Stepp2013) and is highly correlated with the overall attachment to parents’ scale (r's = .86–.90; Gullone & Robinson, Reference Gullone and Robinson2005). Thus, it represents a good estimate of the adolescent's perceived quality of attachment to primary caregivers. The internal consistency for this scale was good at each time point (alpha range = .89 to .92).

Control variables

Race

Caregivers reported on their child's race at the initiation of data collection. As described above, race (0 = Caucasian, 1 = African American) was controlled for in all analyses in light of evidence suggesting racial–ethnic variation in oxytocin allele frequencies (Butovskaya et al., Reference Butovskaya, Lazebny, Sukhodolskaya, Vasiliev, Dronova, Fedenok and Butovskaya2016).

Public assistance

Caregivers reported on receipt of public assistance at the first assessment. Those receiving public assistance were coded as 1, and those not receiving public assistance were coded as 0. Receipt of public assistance was also controlled for in all analyses, given the evidence linking poverty to psychopathology (Costello, Compton, Keeler, & Angold, Reference Costello, Compton, Keeler and Angold2003).

Data analytic strategy

The following analyses included only those participants with available genetic data (n = 2,020). Testing the main study hypotheses required preliminary analyses including obtaining descriptive statistics and examining bivariate correlations between all study variables, all of which were conducted using SPSS version 25 (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL). To assess genetically moderated associations between early threat exposure and general and specific factors of psychopathology, we utilized a general-specific bifactor model (see Figure 1 for conceptual model). The bifactor requires that all indicators load onto orthogonal factors: a general factor that represents common variance shared by all disorders and specific factors that represent unique, disorder-specific variance (Chen, Hayes, Carver, Laurenceau, & Zhang, Reference Chen, Hayes, Carver, Laurenceau and Zhang2012). To achieve this, age-based (18–22) indicators of depression, anxiety, BPD, and ASPD symptom severity (20 indicators total) were each loaded on a “general” psychopathology factor as well as their respective “specific” psychopathology factor. All factors (general and specific) were orthogonal (correlation set to 0), and all age-based residuals were correlated to account for time-varying effects. Verification of good model fit and configural invariance were established across genotype and race based on the fit indices described below.

Figure 1. Multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) general-specific (bifactor) model testing oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576) genotype differences in the association between early threat exposure and disorder-specific versus general factors of psychopathology in early adulthood. Note: Standardized (β) coefficients were estimated separately for each group. Overall model fit was good (χ2 (470) = 1049.99. p < .05; RMSEA = .04; CFI = .97). All significant associations are bolded and represent effects after accounting for race, receipt of public assistance, cohort, and number of years with available threat exposure data. Significant Wald tests indicate differences between women with the GG versus AA/AG OXTR (rs53576) genotype. ANX = anxiety symptom severity; ASPD = antisocial personality disorder symptom severity; BPD = borderline personality disorder symptom severity; DEP = depression symptom severity. *p < .05. **p < .01.

Primary study hypotheses were tested using multiple-group models in MPlus version 8 (Muthén & Muthén, Reference Muthén and Muthén2012), and the effects of race, public assistance, cohort, and number of years with threat exposure data were controlled for in all analyses. First, using full-information maximum likelihood estimation (ML estimator), multiple-group models (GG vs. AA/AG) assessing potential differences in the strength of the association between early threat exposure and general and specific psychopathology factors in early adulthood outcomes were examined. This yielded estimates of direct associations between variables. A series of Wald tests of parameter constraints (Wald, Reference Wald1943) were used to examine whether differences in the strength of these associations for those with GG versus AA/AG alleles reached statistical significance. This involved the standard practice of fixing and freeing cross-group equality constraints on path coefficients. Second, using the ML estimator with bootstrapped standard errors, multiple group mediation models were estimated examining the indirect effects of early threat exposure on general and specific factors in early adulthood outcomes via (a) emotion dysregulation, (b) callousness, and (c) quality of attachment during adolescence. Again, a series of Wald tests examined the statistical significance of differences in these direct and indirect paths across groups. Estimates of indirect effects between these variables were calculated using the product of indirect pathway coefficients, and Wald tests were used to assess significant differences between indirect effects across groups.

For all models, chi-square statistic (Δχ2), comparative fit index (CFI), root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA), and standardized root mean square residual (SRMR) values are reported. For the CFI, conventional cutoff values of .90 or greater indicate acceptable fit and .95 or greater indicate good fit (McDonald & Ho, Reference McDonald and Ho2002). RMSEA values less than .05 indicate a good fit (Kline, Reference Kline2005; McDonald & Ho, Reference McDonald and Ho2002). Within the text and tables, we report effect sizes as standardized βs and confidence intervals for all estimates.

Results

Descriptive statistics and bivariate correlations

Supplemental Table S1 shows frequencies of the OXTR alleles and genotypes, including the final categorization of genotypes for each SNP for the total sample and across racial groups. The distribution of genotypes varied significantly across racial groups for both SNPs [for rs53576, χ2 (2, n = 2004) = 19.59, p < .01; for rs2254298, χ2 (2, n = 2020) = 39.68, p < .01]. Because none of the hypothesized associations were significant for rs2254298 (see Supplemental Tables S2 and S3), only rs53576 genotype (referred to as OXTR hereafter) was included in subsequent analyses.

Table 1 provides means and standard deviations for all study variables as well as bivariate correlations. Relative to their Caucasian peers, African American girls were more likely to carry the GG OXTR genotype, to receive public assistance, and to experience early threat exposure. Additionally, African American girls reported higher levels of emotion dysregulation and callousness during adolescence, as well as higher levels of BPD symptom severity and lower levels of anxiety symptom severity across ages 18–22. Girls receiving public assistance were more likely to carry the GG OXTR genotype, to experience early threat exposure, and to report higher levels of emotion dysregulation and callousness, as well as lower perceived quality of attachment. Girls receiving public assistance also reported higher BPD symptom severity in early adulthood. While chronicity of threat exposure did not differ by genotype, girls carrying the GG OXTR genotype reported higher levels of emotion dysregulation during adolescence. Girls experiencing early threat exposure reported higher levels of emotion dysregulation, higher levels of callousness, and lower perceived quality of attachment during adolescence. They also reported higher ASPD, BPD, depression, and anxiety symptom severity in early adulthood. Higher levels of emotion dysregulation and lower perceived quality of attachment during adolescence were associated with greater depression, anxiety, BPD, and ASPD symptom severity in early adulthood. Higher levels of callousness in adolescence were associated with greater BPD and ASPD symptom severity. Similar patterns of associations were seen when separated by race (see Supplemental Table S4).

Table 1. Means and correlations for all study variables

Note: ANX = anxiety; ASPD = antisocial personality disorder; BPD = borderline personality disorder; DEP = depression; OXTR = oxytocin receptor.

Significant correlations are bolded.

* p < .05. **p < .01.

General-specific bifactor model

Prior to testing our primary hypotheses, we examined the general-specific bifactor model in the total sample. The model demonstrated good fit (χ2 (120) = 437.201, p < .05; RMSEA = 0.034, 95% CI: .031–.038; CFI = 0.983), with significant factor loadings for all indicators on both the general and specific factors. All indicators loaded more strongly on the general factor (β range = .45–.78, ps < .05) than on specific factors. ASPD indicators demonstrated the highest specific factor loadings (β range = .42–.53, ps < .05), followed by BPD (β range = .26–.34, ps < .05), anxiety (β range = .25–.33, ps < .05), and depression (β range = .10–.32, ps < .05). Next, configural invariance was examined in a series of multi-group models. All models demonstrated good fit to the data, and a consistent pattern of factor loadings was observed across both genotype and race, supporting configural invariance in this measurement model across subgroups. Supplemental Table S5 shows factor loadings by both genotype and race.

Multiple group models: Direct associations between general and specific factors by OXTR genotype

Table 2 depicts findings from the multiple group (GG vs. AA/AG) bifactor model assessing potential differences in the association between early threat exposure and general and specific psychopathology factors in early adulthood. All results account for race, receipt of public assistance, cohort, and number of years with available threat exposure data.

Table 2. Multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) general-specific (bifactor) model testing oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576) genotype differences in the association between early threat exposure and disorder-specific versus general factors of psychopathology in early adulthood

Note: Standardized (β) coefficients were estimated separately for each OXTR (rs53576) group. Overall model fit was good (χ2 (470) = 1049.99, p < .05; RMSEA = .04; CFI = .97). ANX = anxiety symptom severity; ASPD = antisocial personality disorder symptom severity; BPD = borderline personality disorder symptom severity; DEP = depression symptom severity; OXTR = oxytocin receptor.

Significant associations are bolded and represent effects after accounting for race, receipt of public assistance, cohort, and number of years with available threat exposure data. Significant Wald tests indicate differences between women with the GG and AA/AG OXTR (rs53576) genotype.

Only those with the AA/AG genotype demonstrated a significant association between early threat exposure and the general psychopathology factor in early adulthood, and the strength of this association was significantly stronger than for those with GG genotype (Figure 2). When examining associations with specific factors, only associations with the BPD specific factor reached significance. Both groups demonstrated a significant association between early threat exposure and BPD in early adulthood, though the strength of these associations did not differ by genotype.

Figure 2. General psychopathology scores as a function of early threat exposure and the oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576). Note. General psychopathology scores are standardized (β) coefficients extracted from the multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) general-specific (bifactor) model.

Multiple group mediation models: Indirect associations

Table 3 shows findings from multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) bifactor mediation models examining the indirect effects of early threat exposure on adulthood outcomes via social–emotional deficits during adolescence (see Figure 3).Footnote 2

Table 3. Multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) general-specific (bifactor) mediation models testing oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576) genotype differences in the association between early threat exposure and general factor of psychopathology in early adulthood via social–emotional deficits in adolescence

Note: Standardized (β) coefficients were estimated separately for each OXTR (rs53576) group. Overall model fit was good (χ2 (470) = 1470.851, p < .05; RMSEA = .04; CFI = .95). OXTR = oxytocin receptor.

Significant associations are bolded and represent effects after accounting for the effects of early threat exposure on all specific factors as well as the effect of race, receipt of public assistance, cohort, and number of years with available threat exposure data. Significant Wald tests indicate differences between women with the GG and AA/AG OXTR (rs53576) genotype.

Figure 3. Multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) mediation model testing oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576) genotype differences in the association between early threat exposure and the general factor of psychopathology in early adulthood. Note: Standardized (β) coefficients were estimated separately for each group. Overall model fit was good (χ2 (470) = 1470.851, p < .05; RMSEA = .04; CFI = .95). All significant associations are bolded and represent effects after accounting for race, receipt of public assistance, cohort, and number of years with available threat exposure data. Significant Wald tests indicate differences between women with the GG versus AA/AG OXTR (rs53576) genotype. ANX = anxiety symptom severity; ASPD = antisocial personality disorder symptom severity; BPD = borderline personality disorder symptom severity; DEP = depression symptom severity. *p < .05. **p < .01.

The direct association between early threat exposure and the general psychopathology factor was reduced to nonsignificance for both genotype groups. In both groups, early threat exposure predicted higher emotion dysregulation and callousness, and lower perceived quality of attachment during adolescence. Additionally, in both groups, higher emotion dysregulation and lower perceived quality of attachment predicted the greater general psychopathology factor in early adulthood, while higher callousness predicted lower general psychopathology factor in early adulthood. There was also a significant indirect effect for all mediators in both groups. However, only the association between early threat exposure and emotion dysregulation was moderated by OXTR, with A carriers showing a significantly stronger association. The indirect pathway through emotion dysregulation (early threat exposure → emotion dysregulation → general psychopathology factor) was also stronger for those women who were A carriers, compared to GG homozygous women.

Multiple group models stratified by race

The inclusion of race did not moderate findings in the total sample. Secondary analyses were re-run for Caucasian and African American samples separately (see Supplemental Table S6). Though results were similar to those seen in the total sample, findings were reduced to trend-level or nonsignificance in both samples.

Discussion

Previous research has demonstrated that OXTR variation moderates the influence of early threat exposure on various psychiatric disorders characterized by social–emotional deficits (i.e., depression, anxiety, BPD, and ASPD; McQuaid et al., Reference McQuaid, McInnis, Abizaid and Anisman2014; Myers et al., Reference Myers, Williams, Gatt, McAuley-Clark, Dobson-Stone, Schofield and Nemeroff2014; Steele & Siever, Reference Steele and Siever2010). The current study sought to clarify whether this G×E interaction is better understood as conferring risk for disorder-specific outcomes and/or general psychopathology, and whether individual differences in social–emotional deficits (i.e., emotion dysregulation, callousness, and perceived quality of attachment) during adolescence constitute potential mediating mechanisms. These questions were examined in a large, at-risk sample of females assessed prospectively from childhood through early adulthood. Consistent with hypotheses, the interactive effects of early threat exposure and OXTR variation predicted a shared liability for “general” psychopathology, with threat-exposed women carrying at least one copy of the rs53576 A allele (AA/AG) being at greatest risk. Additionally, the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation (rs53576) increased risk for general psychopathology via higher levels of emotional dysregulation during adolescence.

Disorder-specific versus general risk for psychopathology

This is the first study to test the hypothesis that the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation contributes to an overall latent vulnerability for psychopathology, echoing prior theory and research that suggests this developmental risk pathway may be nonspecific (McLaughlin et al., Reference McLaughlin, Sheridan and Lambert2014b; Sheridan & McLaughlin, Reference Sheridan and McLaughlin2014). Specifically, the current study found that the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR (rs53576) variation was related to higher levels of “general” psychopathology in early adulthood; however, this G×E failed to predict any unique, disorder-specific outcome. In the current study, this “general” liability reflected common variance across four psychiatric disorders—depression, anxiety, BPD, and ASPD—all hallmarked by social–emotional deficits (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). These disorders had previously been examined in isolation, with research suggesting that the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation increased risk for each of these disorders independently (Jaffee et al., Reference Jaffee, Caspi, Moffitt and Taylor2004; Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Cohen, Brown, Smailes and Bernstein1999; Heim & Nemeroff, Reference Heim and Nemeroff2001; Rogosch & Cicchetti, Reference Rogosch and Cicchetti2005; Stepp et al., Reference Stepp, Lazarus and Byrd2016). Findings also demonstrated a significant association between early threat exposure and unique risk for BPD (see also Stepp et al., Reference Stepp, Lazarus and Byrd2016); however, this risk was not moderated by OXTR variation, and early threat exposure was unrelated to unique risk for depression, anxiety or ASPD. Consistent with high rates of comorbidity (Kessler, Chiu, Demler, Merikangas, & Walters, Reference Kessler, Chiu, Demler, Merikangas and Walters2005; Krueger & Markon, Reference Krueger and Markon2006) and the shift toward understanding transdiagnostic risk as predictors of general risk or multifinality (Barlow, Allen, & Choate, Reference Barlow, Allen and Choate2004; Cicchetti & Rogosch, Reference Cicchetti and Rogosch1996; Nolen-Hoeksema & Watkins, Reference Nolen-Hoeksema and Watkins2011), results provide support for the notion that the synergistic influence of these risk factors contributes to a shared liability for the development of a wide range of psychopathologies (Eaton et al., Reference Eaton, Krueger, Keyes, Skodol, Markon, Grant and Hasin2011; Green et al., Reference Green, McLaughlin, Berglund, Gruber, Sampson, Zaslavsky and Kessler2010; Kessler et al., Reference Kessler, McLaughlin, Green, Gruber, Sampson, Zaslavsky and Angermeyer2010; Keyes et al., Reference Keyes, Eaton, Krueger, McLaughlin, Wall, Grant and Hasin2012; McLaughlin et al., Reference McLaughlin, Green, Gruber, Sampson, Zaslavsky and Kessler2012). Moreover, findings highlight the need to further elucidate factors that help to explain divergent trajectories of symptom expression, leading to disorder-specific outcomes (Nolen-Hoeksema & Watkins, Reference Nolen-Hoeksema and Watkins2011).

It is noteworthy that the impact of the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation was specific to variation in the rs53576 SNP and was not found in rs2254298. Specifically, threat-exposed women carrying at least one copy of the rs53576 A allele were at greatest risk for “general” psychopathology in early adulthood. Indeed, rs53576 has been more extensively investigated as a moderator of early threat exposure, and while results from the broader literature are notably mixed, our findings echo those from other predominately female samples, which show threat-exposed rs53576 A-allele carriers to be most at risk for various forms of psychopathology (Cicchetti et al., Reference Cicchetti, Rogosch, Hecht, Crick and Hetzel2014; Hammen et al., Reference Hammen, Bower and Cole2015; McInnis et al., Reference McInnis, McQuaid, Matheson and Anisman2015; Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Hammen, Starr and Najman2014). This reflects a similar pattern of sex-dependent findings seen when examining the interaction between early maltreatment and genetic variation in monoamine oxidase-A (MAOA), where when seen in women, this G×E is likely to reflect a reverse allelic association compared to men (Byrd & Manuck, Reference Byrd and Manuck2014).

Along these lines, there is some suggestion that discrepancies in research examining the interaction between early threat exposure and OXTR variation may be a function of sex-dependent differences in the development and functioning of the oxytocin system (Carter, Reference Carter2003, Reference Carter2014). For example, sex differences in the action of oxytocin early in life are thought to directly impact the development of the stress-response system, and it is hypothesized that these differences are fundamental to sex differences in behavior (Carter, Reference Carter2014). Moreover, the impact of early experiences has been shown to have sex-dependent effects on behavior (Carter, Boone, Pournajafi-Nazarloo, & Bales, Reference Carter, Boone, Pournajafi-Nazarloo and Bales2009), and this differential functioning impacts physiological, emotional, and behavioral responses throughout the lifespan (Carter, Reference Carter2014, Reference Carter2003). While the biological function of polymorphic variation in rs53576 remains unknown, these findings highlight the importance of considering sex-dependent effects when examining this developmental risk pathway.

Emotion dysregulation as a mediating mechanism

The OXTR-moderated association between early threat exposure and general psychopathology was fully mediated by emotion dysregulation in adolescence, and the strength of this effect was driven by allele-dependent differences in the association between early threat exposure and emotion dysregulation. In other words, women who experienced early threat exposure and carried at least one copy of the rs53576 A allele were characterized by higher levels of emotion dysregulation during adolescence, and higher emotion dysregulation in adolescence predicted general psychopathology for all women. This is consistent with previous research documenting associations between threat exposure, OXTR, and emotion dysregulation (Bradley et al., Reference Bradley, Westen, Mercer, Binder, Jovanovic, Crain and Heim2011; Rodrigues et al., Reference Rodrigues, Saslow, Garcia, John and Keltner2009), as well as a broader literature demonstrating that disruptions to emotion regulation constitute an important transdiagnostic marker of risk (Byrd et al., Reference Byrd, Manuck, Hawes, Vebares, Nimgaonkar, Chowdari and Stepp2019; Cole, Hall, & Hajal, Reference Cole, Hall and Hajal2008; McLaughlin, Hatzenbuehler, Mennin, & Nolen-Hoeksema, Reference McLaughlin, Hatzenbuehler, Mennin and Nolen-Hoeksema2011).

Notably, early threat exposure has been linked specifically to alterations in emotional processing, like attention to threat and heightened emotional reactivity (Heleniak, Jenness, Vander Stoep, McCauley, & McLaughlin, Reference Heleniak, Jenness, Vander Stoep, McCauley and McLaughlin2016; McLaughlin, Sheridan, Alves, & Mendes, Reference McLaughlin, Sheridan, Alves and Mendes2014a; McLaughlin et al., Reference McLaughlin, Sheridan and Lambert2014b; Sheridan & McLaughlin, Reference Sheridan and McLaughlin2014). This is in line with deficits proposed in the social salience hypothesis of oxytocin (see Shamay-Tsoory & Abu-Akel, Reference Shamay-Tsoory and Abu-Akel2016), which suggests that oxytocin plays a major role in orienting attention to environmental social cues. Specifically, this model posits that in the context of a positive and supportive environment, oxytocin functions to increase the salience of safety signals, while in the context of unpredictable, threatening circumstances, oxytocin enhances the salience of environmental threat. Consistent with theories of social information processing (Crick & Dodge, Reference Crick and Dodge1996), this heightened acuity to environmental threat may generalize to potentially nonthreatening stimuli, contributing to greater emotion dysregulation over time and increased risk for maladaptive behavioral responses. Our measure of emotion dysregulation in adolescence, while only a summary construct, may serve as a proxy of these concrete and fundamental emotional processes. Future replications could extend our work by using multimodal assessments of emotion dysregulation (e.g., psychophysiology, neuroimaging) or by focusing on more precise indices of emotional processing using task-based assessments (e.g., of attention to threat) as potential mediators in longitudinal investigations of the early threat-by-OXTR interaction.

Although callousness and perceived quality of attachment did not mediate the impact of this G×E interaction on psychopathology in early adulthood, these social–emotional deficits were higher among women who experienced early threat exposure (regardless of genotype), and they were significantly associated with general psychopathology (again, regardless of genotype). Specifically, women with early threat exposure reported higher levels of callousness and lower perceived quality of attachment during adolescence, consistent with prior research linking threat exposure to increased risk for both callousness (Byrd, Hawes, Loeber, & Pardini, Reference Byrd, Hawes, Loeber and Pardini2018; Kimonis, Centifanti, Allen, & Frick, Reference Kimonis, Centifanti, Allen and Frick2014; Kimonis, Fanti, Isoma, & Donoghue, Reference Kimonis, Fanti, Isoma and Donoghue2013) and attachment quality (Cicchetti, Toth, & Maughan, Reference Cicchetti, Toth, Maughan, Sameroff, Lewis and Miller2000; Egeland & Sroufe, Reference Egeland and Sroufe1981; Reyome, Reference Reyome2010). Moreover, while lower perceived quality of attachment was associated with greater general psychopathology, higher callousness was related to lower levels of general psychopathology in early adulthood. This is consistent with theory and research demonstrating that callousness in youth shows negative associations with depression and anxiety symptoms, and predicts the “unique” portion of antisocial behavior (Byrd, Kahn, & Pardini, Reference Byrd, Kahn and Pardini2013; Byrd, Loeber, & Pardini, Reference Byrd, Loeber and Pardini2012; Frick, Lilienfeld, Ellis, Loney, & Silverthorn, Reference Frick, Lilienfeld, Ellis, Loney and Silverthorn1999). Given that the current study was limited to examining mediators of genetically moderated associations between threat exposure and general psychopathology, future work may seek to further elucidate factors that contribute to divergent trajectories of symptomatology (Nolen-Hoeksema & Watkins, Reference Nolen-Hoeksema and Watkins2011).

Limitations

One limitation of the current study is its focus on a single gene, and hence, a candidate gene approach to G×E investigation. This is necessitated by the study's mechanistic rationale, which derives from the role of oxytocin in social and emotional development and from prior literature implicating variation in the OXTR. Unfortunately, this archival data set did not allow an analysis based on broader coverage of polymorphic variants (haplotypes) within the OXTR. In the larger perspective of G×E research, increasing use of polygenic scores, particularly as constructed from large sample GWA studies, may ultimately capture a greater portion of the variance to be explained by environmentally moderated genetic associations (Bogdan et al., Reference Bogdan, Baranger and Agrawal2018). Nonetheless, this is a fundamentally different approach, one that capitalizes on largely anonymous genetic variation and, therefore, proceeds in the absence of mechanistic hypotheses. Hence, we believe our findings merit consideration by contributing to the growing body of work implicating the OXTR in risk for psychopathology and underscore the utility of biologically informed approaches to understanding nature–nurture effects. Specifically, our findings provide impetus for continuing to investigate the mechanistic role of the OXTR, particularly in interaction with early threat exposure, as predictors of a general liability for psychopathology and highlight the potential importance examining intermediate behavioral phenotypes, like emotion dysregulation.

Additional limitations include our focus on an urban sample of females, meaning findings cannot be generalized to males or clinical populations. Moreover, primary results were reported after collapsing across race due to concerns about reducing power in our multiple group mediation models. While supplementary analyses were stratified by race and did show a similar pattern of results, significance levels were reduced to trend level. Furthermore, we did not have access to ancestry informative markers, and could not detect moderating effects that might stem from differences in extent of genetic admixture among African American participants. Additionally, we had to balance the psychometric limitations of dichotomizing harsh physical and emotional punishment for each year of the seven annual childhood assessments with our overarching goal of evaluating an index of threat exposure that was (a) comprehensive (McLaughlin et al., Reference McLaughlin, Sheridan and Lambert2014b; Sheridan & McLaughlin, Reference Sheridan and McLaughlin2014) and (b) reflected the critical dimension of chronicity (Cowell et al., Reference Cowell, Cicchetti, Rogosch and Toth2015; Jaffee & Maikovich-Fong, Reference Jaffee and Maikovich-Fong2011; Manly et al., Reference Manly, Kim, Rogosch and Cicchetti2001). Given the noted limitations of dichotomizing continuous variables (e.g., loss of information; see MacCallum et al., Reference MacCallum, Zhang, Preacher and Rucker2002), replication is needed. Lastly, our early adult outcomes focused on four common psychiatric disorders characterized by social–emotional deficits (depression, anxiety, BPD, and ASPD) and, in turn, our “general” psychopathology factor represented liability shared only by these specific disorders. Notably, our general-specific bifactor model does not include the full range of disorders used in previous nosologically-focused work seeking to characterize the structure of psychopathology (Caspi et al., Reference Caspi, Houts, Belsky, Goldman-Mellor, Harrington, Israel and Moffitt2014; Kotov et al., Reference Kotov, Krueger, Watson, Achenbach, Althoff, Bagby and Clark2017; Laceulle et al., Reference Laceulle, Vollebergh and Ormel2015; Lahey et al., Reference Lahey, Applegate, Hakes, Zald, Hariri and Rathouz2012; Lahey et al., Reference Lahey, Rathouz, Keenan, Stepp, Loeber and Hipwell2015). Future research may seek to extend findings from the current study by incorporating additional diagnoses/symptomatology.

Finally, the present study focused on three potential social–emotional mediators: emotional dysregulation, callousness, and perceived quality of attachment. This focus was based on research suggesting that (a) the synergistic effects of early threat exposure and OXTR variation increases risk for these specific deficits, and (b) these specific deficits increase risk for the mood, anxiety, and personality disorders examined in the current study. However, our examination of these social–emotional mediators was limited by the timing of our measurements. Specifically, the measurement of these mediators was initiated in adolescence, precluding our ability to control for earlier manifestations of these constructs and their impact on adolescent development. It is possible that other risk factors serve as intermediate behavioral phenotypes, and as such, it may be important to consider alternative mediating pathways and/or how these risk factors interact to contribute to complex developmental cascades of risk (Masten & Cicchetti, Reference Masten and Cicchetti2010). Along these lines, future work may also seek to examine how parental warmth and/or sensitivity may function to buffer risk, especially considering research highlighting the role of oxytocin in child–caregiver bonding (Feldman, Reference Feldman2012; Feldman, Gordon, Influs, Gutbir, & Ebstein, Reference Feldman, Gordon, Influs, Gutbir and Ebstein2013) and the potential impact of gene–environment correlations (Jaffee & Price, Reference Jaffee and Price2007; Rutter, Reference Rutter2007). Lastly, social–emotional mediators in the current study were assessed prospectively across adolescence using only questionnaire data. Future research may seek to utilize more comprehensive measures that include multimodal assessments (e.g., multiple informants, psychophysiology, and neuroimaging).

Summary and clinical implications

The current study extends our understanding of the impact of early threat exposure and OXTR variation on risk for psychopathology. Specifically, it suggests that this G×E interaction confers risk for an overall latent vulnerability for general psychopathology versus disorder-specific risk in a large, prospectively assessed, longitudinal sample of urban women. Moreover, results bridge a gap in the extant literature and suggest that this developmental risk pathway is mediated by emotion dysregulation during the sensitive adolescent period. Specifically, findings indicate that women who experienced early threat exposure and carry at least one copy of the rs53576 A allele (AA/AG) showed significantly higher emotion dysregulation during adolescence, which placed them at risk for general psychopathology in early adulthood. These findings have significant implications for prevention and intervention programs designed to target youth at risk for the development of disorders characterized by social–emotional deficits (i.e., depression, anxiety, BPD, and ASPD). Namely, prevention efforts may focus on ways to reduce emotion dysregulation and/or promote adaptive strategies for managing high levels of emotion dysregulation. Moreover, because these youth are particularly vulnerable, prolonged caregiver scaffolding and targeted emotion socialization during the critical adolescent period may be crucial for risk reduction (Klimes-Dougan et al., Reference Klimes-Dougan, Brand, Zahn-Waxler, Usher, Hastings, Kendziora and Garside2007; Morris, Silk, Steinberg, Myers, & Robinson, 2007).

Supplemental material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954579420000462.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to all the families who took part in this study, and to the PGS team, which includes interviewers and their supervisors, data managers, student workers, and volunteers. This project used the University of Pittsburgh HSCRF Genomics Research Core SNP genotyping service/s. This research was specifically funded by grants from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, Office of Justice Programs, US Department of Justice (Grant #2013-JF-FX-0058); the National Institute of Mental Health (R01 MH056630); the National Institute on Drug Abuse (R01 DA012237); and by funding from the FISA Foundation and the Falk Fund. Additional funding from the National Institute of Mental Health (K01 MH119216; T32 MH018951) and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (T32 AA00745) also supported this work. The opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Department of Justice, National Institutes of Health, or the FISA Foundation and Falk Fund.

Footnotes

1 Participants who described their race as “multiracial” and identified as African American were coded as African American for all genetic analyses.

2 To be as comprehensive as possible, we tested a full mediation model which examined the indirect effects of all potential mediators on all outcomes (general and specific factors). However, this model did not converge. Thus, we focused only on the potential mediation of genetically moderated paths (i.e., the general factor).

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) general-specific (bifactor) model testing oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576) genotype differences in the association between early threat exposure and disorder-specific versus general factors of psychopathology in early adulthood. Note: Standardized (β) coefficients were estimated separately for each group. Overall model fit was good (χ2 (470) = 1049.99. p < .05; RMSEA = .04; CFI = .97). All significant associations are bolded and represent effects after accounting for race, receipt of public assistance, cohort, and number of years with available threat exposure data. Significant Wald tests indicate differences between women with the GG versus AA/AG OXTR (rs53576) genotype. ANX = anxiety symptom severity; ASPD = antisocial personality disorder symptom severity; BPD = borderline personality disorder symptom severity; DEP = depression symptom severity. *p < .05. **p < .01.

Figure 1

Table 1. Means and correlations for all study variables

Figure 2

Table 2. Multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) general-specific (bifactor) model testing oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576) genotype differences in the association between early threat exposure and disorder-specific versus general factors of psychopathology in early adulthood

Figure 3

Figure 2. General psychopathology scores as a function of early threat exposure and the oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576). Note. General psychopathology scores are standardized (β) coefficients extracted from the multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) general-specific (bifactor) model.

Figure 4

Table 3. Multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) general-specific (bifactor) mediation models testing oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576) genotype differences in the association between early threat exposure and general factor of psychopathology in early adulthood via social–emotional deficits in adolescence

Figure 5

Figure 3. Multiple-group (GG vs. AA/AG) mediation model testing oxytocin receptor (OXTR) (rs53576) genotype differences in the association between early threat exposure and the general factor of psychopathology in early adulthood. Note: Standardized (β) coefficients were estimated separately for each group. Overall model fit was good (χ2 (470) = 1470.851, p < .05; RMSEA = .04; CFI = .95). All significant associations are bolded and represent effects after accounting for race, receipt of public assistance, cohort, and number of years with available threat exposure data. Significant Wald tests indicate differences between women with the GG versus AA/AG OXTR (rs53576) genotype. ANX = anxiety symptom severity; ASPD = antisocial personality disorder symptom severity; BPD = borderline personality disorder symptom severity; DEP = depression symptom severity. *p < .05. **p < .01.

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