The Surprising Gene Shared By Criminals - Kathryn Paige Harden
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Is there a difference in heritability
of antisocial behavior that's sexed? Do
men
>> Yeah.
>> inherit more
uh accurately more is is is the
heritability greater effect on boys than
it is on girls?
>> Generally, no. But there's one exception
that I want to come back to. So what we
see is that the genes that are
associated with antisocial behavior in
boys also affect girls. If you have a
fraternal twin, if you're female and you
have a fraternal twin that's a male
sibling, then his antisocial behavior
predicts your likelihood of manifesting
it. Um that the same liabilities are
uh reflected in the same way. So the
same genetic liabilities make you more
likely to be physically aggressive. They
make you more likely to be relationally
aggressive. They make you more likely to
be substance using. They make you more
likely to be risk-taking.
>> It's just for everything the mean for
men, the average for men is shifted up.
>> Mhm.
>> So
>> Oh, so the same impact would have a
sorry the the same raw materials would
have a greater impact in real life.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. The same
way as women commit suicide. Sorry.
Women attempt suicide more than men, but
men commit suicide more than women. It's
their ability to enact
>> violence, antisocial stuff tends to be
greater. So, it's magnified. Right.
Interesting.
>> And so, you know, part of that is around
social opportunity. Like for many years,
you know, women were very discouraged
from drinking, very different were
discouraged from smoking. So, you saw a
big sex difference in smoking and
drinking. Now, it's more socially
acceptable for women to smoke and drink.
And so that average difference has
narrowed and it's the same genes that
seem to be involved in both. The
exception there is that most of our
current studies have focused on what are
called the autotosomes. So we have 23
pairs of chromosomes. One pair is the
sex chromosomes XY or XX and typically
developing children and then the other
22 pair are the same across sexes. And
nearly all of our contemporary studies
have focused just on those 22 pairs of
autotosomes for kind of boring technical
reasons that I'm not going to get into.
We're just now really diving in to the X
chromosome to see is there something
about the X chromosome that might have
specific effects on antisocial behavior.
And the reason why that's interesting is
because men only have one X whereas
women have two. And so men are much more
vulnerable to the effects of a genetic
variant that's XL linked because they
don't have another copy to compensate.
>> Oh, that's so cool.
>> So that's why color blindness for
instance is much more prevalent in men
versus women because it's a sex link.
It's an X chromosome linked um genetic.
>> That is so sick. So the reason why we
think the X chromosome might be
important
um is
and again just to back up a second most
of what we study in our lab is what we
would call common genetic variation. So
these are genetic differences between
people that exist in at least 5%
sometimes people say at least 1% of the
population.
The thing about common genetic variants
is that um they're common which means
that they are likely to have a
relatively small effect in isolation
because if they had a big effect
evolution would make them not common
would weed them out very very quickly.
So you have this trade-off between how
common is a genetic variant and how big
of an effect how powerful it is. Um, so
what we're looking at is lots of common
genetic variants, each of which have a
tiny effect, but if you add them all up,
then you get an appreciable effect of
one one that's meaningful. But there are
studies of rare genetic variants. And
there's one very famous study that was
done in the 1990s where they looked at a
rare variant on um a gene on the X
chromosome and that gene was called
MAOA. So um your monoamines are how your
neurons are talking to each other. It's
like serotonin is a monoamine, dopamine
is a monoamine. So mono monoamine
oxidase is an enzyme that basically is
like a Pac-Man eating the
neurotransmitter in your brain. And if
it doesn't work well, then you get this
incredible buildup of the signals that
your brain ordinarily uses to
communicate with each other. Okay, so
why is that important? In this one
family where they found this genetic
variant on the X chromosome,
it made the MAOA
enzyme not work and all the men in that
family suffered from extremely serious
antisocial behavior problems. Whereas
their sisters were completely
>> wow
>> typically functioning. So the men, one
raped his sister, one committed arson,
one stabbed his boss with a pitchfork.
Huge levels of antisocial violence in
this family. And the their sisters and
their moms were like, "What the [ __ ] is
going on here?" Like, why why do my sons
and my brothers keep doing this and we
don't have this problem? And it's
because they have two exes. And so if
they inherited the mutation, it didn't
matter because there was another
functioning version of
>> to regress them back toward the mean
>> to to to kind of dosage like they could
compensate for it. Whereas if if you're
a man and you have 1x and you got this,
you know, 50-50 shot, which of your
mom's exes are you getting? It's a 50-50
shot whether or not you were going to be
antisocial.
>> So that's a rare variant.
You know, the vast majority of people
who are deeply antisocial do not have
this MAOA problem.
>> Don't use the MAOA excuse.
>> They can't use the MAOA excuse. But I I
think it's important for two reasons.
And one is that we think of our moral
faculties as our ability to not go
around stabbing our boss every time
we're mad at him in moral terms, in
spiritual terms or in cognitive terms.
And it turns out that it's very
vulnerable to disruption. You can change
one letter of your genome that changes
one gene which changes one enzyme and
that capacity is really
if not destroyed very very impaired. And
so the extent to which our morality is a
biological faculty I think is very much
supported by the fact that we can so
profoundly disrupt it by this one change
in our genome. And the other thing that
I find so interesting about this case
study is that um these men were in the
criminal legal system in the Netherlands
and no one was like, "Oh, this must be a
genetic problem. They weren't not guilty
by reason of insanity. They weren't, you
know, lacking capacity to stay on trial.
They were indistinguishable
from the rest of the offending
population based just on their behavior.
And the only reason we know that their
behavior was due to this genetic cause
is because of the familial data that
made the pattern of transmission so
clear.
And I think that really brings up the
question, how many other people who are
persistently violent in families that
are persistently violent? There might be
some
um genetic or neurobiological
explanation that we just haven't
discovered yet. Like we just don't know
that. In the 80s, they would have
considered it ridiculous. Like this
persistently violent family, it's you're
telling me it's because they have a
>> one gene that's wrong. like would have
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