Sex differences in disease genetics: evidence, evolution, and detection.

Gilks, William P; Abbott, Jessica; Morrow, Edward H (2014). Sex differences in disease genetics: evidence, evolution, and detection.. Trends in Genetics, 30, (10), 453 - 463
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DOI:
| Published | English
Authors:
Gilks, William P ; Abbott, Jessica ; Morrow, Edward H
Department:
Evolutionary ecology
Genetics of Sex Differences
Research Group:
Genetics of Sex Differences
Abstract:
Understanding the genetic architecture of disease is an enormous challenge, and should be guided by evolutionary principles. Recent studies in evolutionary genetics show that sexual selection can have a profound influence on the genetic architecture of complex traits. Here, we summarise data from heritability studies and genome-wide association studies (GWASs) showing that common genetic variation influences many diseases and medically relevant traits in a sex-dependent manner. In addition, we discuss how the discovery of sex-dependent effects in population samples is improved by joint interaction analysis (rather than separate-sex), as well as by recently developed software. Finally, we argue that although genetic variation that has sex-dependent effects on disease risk could be maintained by mutation-selection balance and genetic drift, recent evidence indicates that intra-locus sexual conflict could be a powerful influence on complex trait architecture, and maintain sex-dependent disease risk alleles in a population because they are beneficial to the opposite sex.
ISSN:
1362-4555

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