Minor Allele Frequency Changes the Nature of Genotype by Environment Interactions. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • In the classical twin study, phenotypic variation is often partitioned into additive genetic (A), common (C) and specific environment (E) components. From genetical theory, the outcome of genotype by environment interaction is expected to inflate A when the interacting factor is shared (i.e., C) between the members of a twin pair. We show that estimates of both A and C can be inflated. When the shared interacting factor changes the size of the difference between homozygotes' means, the expected sibling or DZ twin correlation is .5 if and only if the minor allele frequency (MAF) is .5; otherwise the expected DZ correlation is greater than this value, consistent (and confounded) with some additional effect of C. This result is considered in the light of the distribution of minor allele frequencies for polygenic traits. Also discussed is whether such interactions take place at the locus level or affect an aggregated biological structure or system. Interactions with structures or endophenotypes that result from the aggregated effects of many loci will generally emerge as part of the A estimate.

published proceedings

  • Behav Genet

altmetric score

  • 9.25

author list (cited authors)

  • Verhulst, B., & Neale, M. C.

citation count

  • 5

complete list of authors

  • Verhulst, Brad||Neale, Michael C

publication date

  • January 2016