4.2 Article

A Genetic Investigation of the Well-Being Spectrum

Journal

BEHAVIOR GENETICS
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages 286-297

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10519-019-09951-0

Keywords

Well-being spectrum; Personality; Genetic correlation; Loneliness; Self-rated health; Flourishing

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO: MagW/ZonMW) [904-61-090, 985-10-002, 904-61-193, 480-04-004, 400-05-717, 463-06-001, NWO-VENI 451-04-034, Addiction-31160008, Middelgroot-911-09-032, Spinozapremie 56-464-14192]
  2. Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure (BBMRI-NL) [184.021.007]
  3. VU University's Institute for Health and Care Research (EMGO+)
  4. European Research Council [230374]
  5. ERC [284167]
  6. Avera Institute for Human Genetics
  7. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01D0042157-01A]
  8. Genetic Association Information Network (GAIN) of the Foundation for the US National Institutes of Health (NIMH) [MH081802, 1RC2MH089951-01, 1RC2 MH089995-01]
  9. NIMH [NWO 480-05003]
  10. Dutch Brain Foundation
  11. department of Psychology and Education of the VU University Amsterdam
  12. senior fellowship of the (EMGO+) Institute for Health and Care
  13. ERC consolidation grant [771057]
  14. Royal Netherlands Academy of Science Professor Award [PAH/6635]
  15. ZonMw grant: Genetics [531003014]
  16. ZonMw project [849200011]
  17. European Research Council (ERC) [771057] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The interrelations among well-being, neuroticism, and depression can be captured in a so-called well-being spectrum (3-phenotype well-being spectrum, 3-WBS). Several other human traits are likely linked to the 3-WBS. In the present study, we investigate how the 3-WBS can be expanded. First, we constructed polygenic risk scores for the 3-WBS and used this score to predict a series of traits that have been associated with well-being in the literature. We included information on loneliness, big five personality traits, self-rated health, and flourishing. The 3-WBS polygenic score predicted all the original 3-WBS traits and additionally loneliness, self-rated health, and extraversion (R-2 between 0.62% and 1.58%). Next, using LD score regression, we calculated genetic correlations between the 3-WBS and the traits of interest. From all candidate traits, loneliness and self-rated health were found to have the strongest genetic correlations (r(g) = -0.79, and r(g) = 0.64, respectively) with the 3-WBS. Lastly, we use Genomic SEM to investigate the factor structure of the proposed spectrum. The best model fit was obtained for a two-factor model including the 5-WBS traits, with two highly correlated factors representing the negative- and positive end of the spectrum. Based on these analyses we propose to include loneliness and self-rated health in the WBS and use a 5-phenotype well-being spectrum in future studies to gain more insight into the determinants of human well-being.

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