Genomic evidence consistent with antagonistic pleiotropy may help explain the evolutionary maintenance of same-sex sexual behaviour in humans

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作者
Brendan P. Zietsch
Morgan J. Sidari
Abdel Abdellaoui
Robert Maier
Niklas Långström
Shengru Guo
Gary W. Beecham
Eden R. Martin
Alan R. Sanders
Karin J. H. Verweij
机构
[1] University of Queensland,Centre for Psychology and Evolution, School of Psychology
[2] University of Amsterdam,Department of Psychiatry, Amsterdam UMC location AMC
[3] Harvard Medical School,Department of Genetics
[4] Karolinska Institutet,Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics
[5] University of Miami,Department of Human Genetics
[6] NorthShore University HealthSystem Research Institute,Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
[7] University of Chicago,Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience
来源
Nature Human Behaviour | 2021年 / 5卷
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摘要
Human same-sex sexual behaviour (SSB) is heritable, confers no immediately obvious direct reproductive or survival benefit and can divert mating effort from reproductive opportunities. This presents a Darwinian paradox: why has SSB been maintained despite apparent selection against it? We show that genetic effects associated with SSB may, in individuals who only engage in opposite-sex sexual behaviour (OSB individuals), confer a mating advantage. Using results from a recent genome-wide association study of SSB and a new genome-wide association study on number of opposite-sex sexual partners in 358,426 individuals, we show that, among OSB individuals, genetic effects associated with SSB are associated with having more opposite-sex sexual partners. Computer simulations suggest that such a mating advantage for alleles associated with SSB could help explain how it has been evolutionarily maintained. Caveats include the cultural specificity of our UK and US samples, the societal regulation of sexual behaviour in these populations, the difficulty of measuring mating success and the fact that measured variants capture a minority of the total genetic variation in the traits.
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页码:1251 / 1258
页数:7
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