Last updated:
Author(s):
Eric A. W. Slob, Dilnoza Muslimova, Cornelius A. Rietveld
Publish date:
9 January 2026
Journal:
Behavior Genetics
PubMed ID:
41507469

Abstract

Gene-environment interaction (G×E) studies analyze how environmental conditions cushion or exacerbate differences in genetic endowments. A gene-environment correlation (rGE) between the polygenic index (PGI) and the environmental condition employed in these G×E studies could bias the estimation of the interaction effect. In this brief report, we discuss the limitations of the commonplace correlation-based test used to verify the orthogonality of the PGI and the environment, and propose to complement it with an additional assessment of the genetic correlation between the phenotype corresponding to the PGI of interest and the environmental condition in the G×E analysis sample using bivariate GREML. Our proposed test is straightforward to perform with the data typically available to G×E researchers, and bypasses that the PGI reflects the environmental conditions of the training sample used to calibrate it. Using UK Biobank data, we provide empirical illustrations covering three environmental conditions relevant for educational attainment. We confirm the orthogonality of the Raising of School Leave Age 1972 educational reform and of gender, although gender did not pass the correlation-based test. However, birth district social class and the genetic propensity for educational attainment appear to be intrinsically intertwined.

Related projects

We examine how Genes and the Environment (GxE) interact to generate inequalities in education and health over the life course. Previous research has established that…

Institution:
University of Zurich, Switzerland

It is increasingly acknowledged that both the prenatal and postnatal environment that one is exposed around birth affects individuals’ health and well-being in older age.

Institution:
University of Bristol, Great Britain

All projects