Genetic Variation in the Social Environment Contributes to Health and Disease
Author(s) -
Amelie Baud,
Megan K. Mulligan,
Francesco Paolo Casale,
Jesse Ingels,
Casey J. Bohl,
Jacques Callebert,
Jean-Marie Launay,
Jon P. Krohn,
Andrés Legarra,
Robert W. Williams,
Oliver Stegle
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
plos genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.587
H-Index - 233
eISSN - 1553-7404
pISSN - 1553-7390
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006498
Subject(s) - biology , heritability , genetic variation , phenotype , genetics , variation (astronomy) , disease , genotype , missing heritability problem , evolutionary biology , gene , genetic variants , medicine , physics , pathology , astrophysics
Assessing the impact of the social environment on health and disease is challenging. As social effects are in part determined by the genetic makeup of social partners, they can be studied from associations between genotypes of one individual and phenotype of another (social genetic effects, SGE, also called indirect genetic effects). For the first time we quantified the contribution of SGE to more than 100 organismal phenotypes and genome-wide gene expression measured in laboratory mice. We find that genetic variation in cage mates (i.e. SGE) contributes to variation in organismal and molecular measures related to anxiety, wound healing, immune function, and body weight. Social genetic effects explained up to 29% of phenotypic variance, and for several traits their contribution exceeded that of direct genetic effects (effects of an individual’s genotypes on its own phenotype). Importantly, we show that ignoring SGE can severely bias estimates of direct genetic effects (heritability). Thus SGE may be an important source of “missing heritability” in studies of complex traits in human populations. In summary, our study uncovers an important contribution of the social environment to phenotypic variation, sets the basis for using SGE to dissect social effects, and identifies an opportunity to improve studies of direct genetic effects.
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