Maintenance of Complex Trait Variation: Classic Theory and Modern Data

Numerous studies have found evidence that GWAS loci experience negative selection, which increases in intensity with the effect size of identified variants. However, there is also accumulating evidence that this selection is not entirely mediated by the focal trait and contains a substantial pleiotr...

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Published in:Frontiers in genetics Vol. 12; p. 763363
Main Authors: Koch, Evan M, Sunyaev, Shamil R
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 12-11-2021
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Summary:Numerous studies have found evidence that GWAS loci experience negative selection, which increases in intensity with the effect size of identified variants. However, there is also accumulating evidence that this selection is not entirely mediated by the focal trait and contains a substantial pleiotropic component. Understanding how selective constraint shapes phenotypic variation requires advancing models capable of balancing these and other components of selection, as well as empirical analyses capable of inferring this balance and how it is generated by the underlying biology. We first review the classic theory connecting phenotypic selection to selection at individual loci as well as approaches and findings from recent analyses of negative selection in GWAS data. We then discuss geometric theories of pleiotropic selection with the potential to guide future modeling efforts. Recent findings revealing the nature of pleiotropic genetic variation provide clues to which genetic relationships are important and should be incorporated into analyses of selection, while findings that effect sizes vary between populations indicate that GWAS measurements could be misleading if effect sizes have also changed throughout human history.
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Diego Ortega-Del Vecchyo, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico
This article was submitted to Evolutionary and Population Genetics, a section of the journal Frontiers in Genetics
Reviewed by: Jeremy Berg, University of Chicago, United States
Edited by: Mashaal Sohail, University of Chicago, United States
ISSN:1664-8021
1664-8021
DOI:10.3389/fgene.2021.763363