- Reynolds, Chandra A;
- Gatz, Margaret;
- Christensen, Kaare;
- Christiansen, Lene;
- Dahl Aslan, Anna K;
- Kaprio, Jaakko;
- Korhonen, Tellervo;
- Kremen, William S;
- Krueger, Robert;
- McGue, Matt;
- Neiderhiser, Jenae M;
- Pedersen, Nancy L;
- for the IGEMS consortium
Despite emerging interest in gene-environment interaction (GxE) effects, there is a dearth of studies evaluating its potential relevance apart from specific hypothesized environments and biometrical variance trends. Using a monozygotic within-pair approach, we evaluated evidence of G×E for body mass index (BMI), depressive symptoms, and cognition (verbal, spatial, attention, working memory, perceptual speed) in twin studies from four countries. We also evaluated whether APOE is a 'variability gene' across these measures and whether it partly represents the 'G' in G×E effects. In all three domains, G×E effects were pervasive across country and gender, with small-to-moderate effects. Age-cohort trends were generally stable for BMI and depressive symptoms; however, they were variable-with both increasing and decreasing age-cohort trends-for different cognitive measures. Results also suggested that APOE may represent a 'variability gene' for depressive symptoms and spatial reasoning, but not for BMI or other cognitive measures. Hence, additional genes are salient beyond APOE.