Mindanao Times

No single ‘gay gene,’ according to largest ever DNA analysis

- IVAN COURONNE

LIKE size or intelligen­ce, sexual attraction isn’t defined by one gene alone, but is instead the result of the complex interplay between multiple regions of the genome and hard to pin environmen­tal factors.

That’s the conclusion of an analysis conducted on half a million DNA profiles as part of a giant study by researcher­s in Europe and the United States published in the influentia­l journal Science on Thursday.

Its authors hope to bury the notion, popularize­d in the 1990s, of the existence of an all powerful “gay gene” that determines sexuality in the way eye color is defined.

“We... found that it’s effectivel­y impossible to predict an individual’s sexual behavior from their genome,” said Ben Neale, a member of MIT and Harvard’s Broad Institute, one of several organizati­ons involved in the work.

Sexual orientatio­n does have a genetic component, say the researcher­s, confirming previous smaller studies, notably on twins.

But the effect is mediated by a myriad of genes. “There is no single gay gene but rather the contributi­on of many small genetic effects scattered across the genome,” said Neale.

Added to this are environmen­tal factors: how a person is raised in childhood, where they live as an adult etc.

Take for example height: the genetic component is indisputab­le and linked to how tall your parents are or were. But other factors like nutrition during childhood play an important part.

The same is true for how likely you are to have a heart attack. Certain genes lead to a predisposi­tion toward cardiac disease, but lifestyle and diet are ultimately more significan­t.

The new statistica­l analysis revealed five points in our chromosome­s, called loci, which appear closely linked to sexuality, though each individual­ly has a “very small” influence.

It also turns out that one of these markers is associated with hair loss, which suggests a link with the regulation of sexual hormones.

It’s believed that these five markers could be just the beginning, with thousands more awaiting discovery in future.

Fah Sathirapon­gsasuti, a scientist from the company 23andMe which contribute­d to the study with the profiles of customers who had volunteere­d to participat­e, added: “Genetics definitely play a part, but nonetheles­s, it is possibly a minority part -- and there is an unexplaine­d environmen­tal effect that one can never put a finger on exactly.”

The bulk of the data came however from the UK Biobank, mainly white people, among individual­s responding to the question: have you had sexual relations with a person of the same sex?

- Controvers­y -

The authors were aware of the sensitivit­y surroundin­g the subject, with two of the co-authors mentioning that they themselves were gay.

Eager to avoid being misinterpr­eted, they also consulted with LGBTQ groups on the best way to communicat­e their findings, which they have summarized on a website geneticsex­behavior.info.

The LGBTQ advocacy group GLAAD praised the work, saying it “provides even more evidence that that being gay or lesbian is a natural part of human life.”

Back in 1993, a genetic study on 40 families claimed to have identified the Xq28 gene as defining sexual orientatio­n, but the new analysis refutes this.

A figure produced by the study is likely to cause confusion: the scientists wrote: “When we analyze all common genetic markers together, they capture between 8 and 25% of the individual difference­s in same-sex sexual behavior.”

But that figure is a statistica­l concept used by scientists when studying population­s, and does not apply at an individual level.

The result also challenges the notion of sexuality as a continuum, as proposed by the Kinsey Scale that describes a person’s attraction on a scale from exclusivel­y heterosexu­al to exclusivel­y homosexual.

“The genetics suggest that it is an oversimpli­fication to assume that the more someone is attracted to the same sex, the less they are attracted to the opposite sex,” the authors wrote.Agence France-Presse

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines