Abstract

Individuals with a higher education are more likely to migrate, increasing the chance of meeting a spouse with a different ancestral background. In this context, the presence of strong educational assortment can result in greater ancestry differences within more educated spouse pairs, while less educated individuals are more likely to mate with someone with whom they share more ancestry. We examined the association between educational attainment and F roh (= the proportion of the genome consisting of runs of homozygosity [ROHs]) in ~2,000 subjects of Dutch ancestry. The subjects’ own educational attainment showed a nominally significant negative association with F roh (p = .045), while the contribution of parental education to offspring F roh was highly significant (father: p < 10-5; mother: p = 9×10-5), with more educated parents having offspring with fewer ROHs. This association was significantly and fully mediated by the physical distance between parental birthplaces (paternal education: p mediation = 2.4 × 10-4; maternal education: p mediation = 2.3 × 10-4), which itself was also significantly associated with F roh (p = 9 × 10-5). Ancestry-informative principal components from the offspring showed a significantly decreasing association with geography as parental education increased, consistent with the significantly higher migration rates among more educated parents. Parental education also showed a high spouse correlation (Spearman’s ρ = .66, p = 3 × 10-262). We show that less educated parents are less likely to mate with the more mobile parents with a higher education, creating systematic differences in homozygosity due to ancestry differences not directly captured by ancestry-informative principal components (PCs). Understanding how behaviors influence the genomic structure of a population is highly valuable for studies on the genetic etiology of behavioral, cognitive, and social traits.

Highlights

  • Non-random mating can create systematic differences in parental relatedness, which can have a direct and detectable impact on genome-wide homozygosity in subsequent generations

  • In the absence of data on parental Educational attainment (EA), geographic mobility, and ancestry, this observation could have been interpreted as the result of deleterious effects of inbreeding on cognitive ability, which would fit the existing hypotheses [38,39,40,41]

  • The effect was considerably more significant when associating Froh with paternal or maternal EA. We investigated whether this could be explained by a combination of migration and educational assortment

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Summary

Introduction

Non-random mating can create systematic differences in parental relatedness, which can have a direct and detectable impact on genome-wide homozygosity in subsequent generations. In the Netherlands for example, the consequences of continuous religious assortment during the last ~400 years and the relatively recent secularization are detectable through homozygosity differences between religious and non-religious groups. Such systematic differences can cause spurious associations between homozygosity and traits related to religiosity [1]. When ancestry shows high correlations with geography, like in the Netherlands [8,9], these behaviors may increase the chance for higher educated individuals to mate with someone with a different ancestral background, making their offspring more outbred, while less educated spouse pairs are more likely to share more ancestry

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