Social behaviour is a heritable, context-dependent trait that changes across social settings and development, influencing wellbeing and mental health. We present the first genome-wide meta-regression study of social behaviour from infancy to early adulthood, leveraging 491,246 repeat measures of low prosocial behaviour and peer/social difficulties in European-ancestry cohorts (Neff=121,777, Nind=73,321). We modelled heterogeneity in genetic effects across social domains, informants, and ages (2-29 years), capturing social context through genomic influences. Six loci were identified, including variation within CADM2 (p=2.51x10-9). The SNP-based heritability was modest (2-7%), and the genetic architecture of social behaviour multidimensional. Polygenic scores demonstrated predictability and accuracy in independent European-ancestry cohorts and, partially, in African-ancestry cohorts (Nind=16,305). Genetic correlations with later-life and mental health outcomes showed context-dependent patterns. Modelling predicted onsets of associations with social behaviour revealed distinct profiles, as observed for autism, ADHD, depression and schizophrenia, highlighting novel opportunities to genetically proxy developmental trajectories.
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Genome-wide analysis of social behaviour in context: a meta-regression approa…
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.08.16.667148v1?rss=1