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Are Some Women Genetically Inclined To Divorce?

Are Some Women  Genetically Inclined To Divorce?

Research published in the journal PLOS ONE suggested a genetic component to divorce risk, adding biological complexity to what is usually discussed in purely social and psychological terms. The study found that women who carry a particular variant of a serotonin-regulating gene were significantly more likely to have experienced divorce, and that this relationship held even after controlling for depression and other confounding factors.

The gene in question — a variant of the serotonin transporter gene 5-HTTLPR — has been extensively studied in relation to depression, anxiety, and emotional sensitivity. Women who carry the short allele variant of this gene tend to be more sensitive to emotional cues and more reactive to relationship quality. The hypothesis is that these women, in stressful or dissatisfying marriages, experience greater emotional pain and are more likely to pursue separation as a result.

Importantly, the finding does not suggest genetic determinism. Having the variant in question does not mean a woman will divorce — it means she may be more sensitive to relationship quality in ways that influence the decision. Women with the variant who are in satisfying, supportive marriages do not show elevated divorce rates.

The research fits into a broader picture of how temperament, emotional regulation, and relationship satisfaction interact. Sensitivity is not dysfunction — the same traits that make some people more vulnerable to unhappy relationships also make them more attuned to emotional nuance, more responsive to their partners, and capable of deeper connection when conditions are right.

The question of whether behavioral genetics research of this kind helps or harms is genuinely open. Understanding biological contributions to relationship outcomes could support more targeted interventions. It could also, if misapplied, become a basis for unfair characterization.

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