Author Topic: Could Your Genes Help Bring You Wedded Bliss?  (Read 820 times)

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Could Your Genes Help Bring You Wedded Bliss?
« on: October 16, 2013, 04:03:19 am »
Could Your Genes Help Bring You Wedded Bliss?
By Randy Dotinga  HealthDay Reporter,  HealthDay Oct. 14, 2013 12:00AM PDT



A particular genetic variation may make it harder to weather marital turbulence, study suggests.
 


MONDAY, Oct. 14 (HealthDay News) -- One of the keys to a successful marriage may lurk not in the stars but in your genes. A new study links variation in a single gene to the ability to tolerate the good times and bad times of married life.

The research isn't conclusive. It's possible that the gene plays no role at all in marriage or that scientists don't fully understand the connection they think they see. Since marriage is one of the most complex of human relationships, it's likely that a host of factors beyond genetics affects its success, experts said.

Still, the findings may "take the mystery of our social world and clarify a little piece of it," said study co-author Robert Levenson, a psychology professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

The research is rooted in the fact that emotions affect marriage in obvious and subtle ways, Levenson said.

"Relations tend to be quite successful, and people are happy, when there are a lot of positive emotions like affection. When there's a lot of negative emotion like disgust and contempt, it can be particularly poisonous for relationships," he said. But, he added, "everybody also knows married couples who bicker all the time, but their marriages seem to work just fine. Other couples have one argument and they're in divorce court."

So why can some couples tolerate swings in emotion better than others? The researchers targeted a gene that affects serotonin, a brain chemical that's considered crucial to mood and well-being. Their goal: to figure out if it's connected to the inner workings of a marriage.

For the study, published online Oct. 7 in the journal Emotion, the researchers examined DNA samples from 125 long-term spouses in the San Francisco area who were tracked over 20 years for research into marital satisfaction. The participants, mostly white, were all middle-aged or older at that time.

At issue is a genetic variant called 5-HTTLPR. Everyone receives a copy of this variant from each parent. About 20 percent of those in the study had two short 5-HTTLPR "alleles" (types), one of three possible configurations. Those people were more likely than those with one or two long alleles to be affected by the emotional level of a marriage --- unhappier when there was a lot of negative emotion, such as fighting, and happier when there was a lot of positive emotion, Levenson said.

The effects of this genetic trait are "like amplifiers, like the knob on your hi-fi where you turn up the music," Levenson said. "If the music is really bad, it will be more unpleasant. And if it's really good, it'll be more pleasant. They turn up your sensitivity to the emotional quality of the music in your relationship."

The researchers also found that these genetic influences strengthened with age.

Paul Zak, chairman of the Center for Neuroeconomics Studies at Claremont Graduate University in California, praised the research but cautioned that many other genes are likely to contribute to marital satisfaction, including those that affect emotional bonding, aggression and promiscuity. He also said the overall effect of the genetic variation on marriage seems to be small.

In other words, knowing your fiance's 5-HTTLPR genotype probably won't help your predict the success of your impending marriage.

And Zak said people can find ways to counteract their genetic propensities regarding emotion by taking psychiatric drugs or adjusting the way they deal with spouses. "If your spouse is more emotional, anxious, or very sensitive to negative emotions, the other spouse can turn this around by being positive more of the time," he said.


http://health.yahoo.net/news/s/hsn/could-your-genes-help-bring-you-wedded-bliss

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Re: Could Your Genes Help Bring You Wedded Bliss?
« Reply #1 on: October 16, 2013, 04:07:34 am »
The Key to a Happy Marriage May Lie in Your Genes
By Nina Lincoff Mon, Oct 14, 2013
 


Instead of asking for your partner's Zodiac sign, it might be time to try a more scientific question: "How long are your 5-HTTLPR alleles?"

Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley have found that a small gene variant known as the 5-HTTLPR polymorphism affects how a person deals with and is impacted by a negative emotional climate. In other words, it's one way to figure out if your potential partner can go with the flow.

For some spouses, it's easy to move past arguments and negativity and focus on the positives; for others, the negative can cast a shadow across the entire relationship.

Using data from a 13-year observation of married couples (taken from a larger longitudinal study), researchers identified a link between relationship fulfillment and the 5-HTTLPR polymorphism, a variant that affects serotonin transportation in the brain. Serotonin is a hormone that impacts our emotions, and it's sometimes called the "well-being hormone."

All humans inherit their genes from their parents, and with their genotypes come individual mutations. Everybody receives a copy of 5-HTTLPR from each parent. But researchers found that a slight difference in 5-HTTLPR allele length can produce dramatic differences in how people cope with the emotional climate.

Participants with two short 5-HTTLPR alleles were most unhappy in their marriages when there was a lot of negative emotion and happiest when there was positive emotion. Participants with mismatched allele lengths were much less affected by the emotional climate of their marriages.

Researchers were surprised how much difference a spouse's 5-HTTLPR genotype makes in terms of the affect of emotions on marital satisfaction over the long term, says lead study author Claudia Haase, Ph.D., an assistant professor of human development and social policy at Northwestern University.


Wedded Bliss, or Not

To uncover the truth about relationship satisfaction, researchers went right to the source: married couples. More than 150 couples take part in a San Francisco-based longitudinal study that began in 1989. Every five years, couples check in with researchers to report on their marital satisfaction. Genetic material was also collected in 2009 from 125 individuals in 51 couples, as well as 23 couples in which only one spouse participated.

Researchers found that emotional climates made a much deeper impact on participants with two short 5-HTTLPR alleles, particularly in older couples.

"In our study, the link between genes, emotion, and marital satisfaction was particularly pronounced for older adults," Haase says. She cites the head of the longitudinal study, UC Berkeley psychologist Robert W. Levenson, who says that “one explanation for this latter finding is that in late life—just as in early childhood—we are maximally susceptible to the influences of our genes.”


Put an Allele on It

In the day-to-day workings of a long-term relationship, the emotional climate, or how safe, respected, and understood the partners feel is crucial.

“For people with two short alleles, a good emotional climate is very important,” Haase says. Which isn’t to say that those with mismatched alleles or long alleles should settle for less, it's simply another way to understand how people experience marriage. 

The United States could use a little help with sustaining long-term marriages. Currently, the divorce rate is nearly 53 percent, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

"Knowing about your spouse's 5-HTTLPR genotype might be interesting regardless of whether a couple is happy or miserable. But the more important thing for couples, especially those who are going through trouble, would be to find ways to foster a good emotional climate in their marriage," Haase says. If one spouse has two short alleles, a good emotional climate could make a world of a difference for his or her marital satisfaction, she says.


Setting the Mood

“Knowing that your spouse has two short alleles of 5-HTTLPR can remind you that it is really important and beneficial for your spouse to create a beneficial emotional climate in your marriage,” Haase says.

It's not all roses and candle-lit baths (though those certainly can help). With allele knowledge comes the opportunity to set the right emotional tone for a specific couple.

"[Couples] can do this in a lot of different ways: by showing lots of affection, expressing joy, joking around, and by minimizing contempt and other negative emotions," Haase says. While those tips seem like relationship 101, for spouses with two short alleles it can provide a huge boost for marital satisfaction. 

“It's possible that emotion-focused couples therapy and counseling approaches might be particularly important and helpful for these people,” Haase says.


http://health.yahoo.net/articles/relationships/key-happy-marriage-may-lie-your-genes

Offline gwillybj

Re: Could Your Genes Help Bring You Wedded Bliss?
« Reply #2 on: October 16, 2013, 02:27:08 pm »
Instead of asking for your partner's Zodiac sign, it might be time to try a more scientific question: "How long are your 5-HTTLPR alleles?"
One of those questions that might get a slap in the face for a reply :) ? The information sounds plausible, even so.
Two possibilities exist: Either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying. ― Arthur C. Clarke
I am on a mission to see how much coffee it takes to actually achieve time travel. :wave:

 

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