We tried to explain that evolutionary (population) history
lies behind the logic of both family-based linkage and population-sample-based
association approaches to genomewide mapping (such as in GWAS). When causes are strong and not too numerous,
mapping works in large families. That’s
because if something is genetic it must be familial—that in a sense is what
‘genetic’ means in this context—and one can trace transmission, following
Mendelian principles, explicitly.
If causes are individually rare and there are many, pooling
families doesn’t work very well, because getting large enough families to map
individually is difficult and costly, but that is just what GWAS does in its
implicit, unconstrained pooling of different families, where the family
connections aren’t even known!
In the end, however, we concluded that if there were too
many different causes, and they are weak or rare, and environmental factors are
important, then the trait is basically the result of a mix of contributors,
differing among individuals both within and between families. Individually, we suggested, the causes are
minnows, and fishing in a pond of minnows, no matter how it’s done, will only
find minnows. But there is more to the
issues than this, and it deserves to be recognized.
When a minnow is a
whale
There are tons of results in which
a known genetic mutation identified as having a
major effect is found to have lesser effects in some people. Even family members sharing the variant may have
different effects (more or less severe, for example, in regard to disease). Some may have an essentially lethal
phenotype, while others are only mildly affected.
The reason is that a variant’s causal effects depend
fundamentally on its context. This is true for environmental risk factors
as much as genetic ones. A causal
minnow—a minor causal effect—can be major in some contexts. Any approach to genetics that fails to take
this basic fact seriously into account is, in a sense, amateurish.
A good illustration of this is that when a disease-causing
genetic change is engineered into a laboratory mouse, it may or may not mimic
the human trait. Sometimes, perhaps most
of the time, it will have a roughly similar effect in one strain of lab mice,
but very different, or even no effect,
in other strains. Indeed, while this is
very well-known to mouse workers (including ourselves when we were doing that
sort of experiment), it is rarely taken seriously into account. A transgenic effect is reported, but not
checked in other strains of lab mice, or in other animal models, such as rats
or dogs. The reasons, especially for
other species than mice, is that such testing is quite costly. The bottom line is that we learn about the
biology of the effect in one of its contexts, but extrapolate to other
contexts, even humans, at our peril.
This, too, is well known.
This is why, among humans within or between populations, a
mapping minnow can be a causal whale in some people, and vice versa. It’s something that needs to be recognized more widely, but
for which there really is no generic explanation.
It’s why risk estimates given for a genetic variation—such as by
companies essentially practicing shell-game medicine without a license by
advising customers about their ‘risk’ based on DNA analysis—are often not worth
the electrons needed to send them. Some
risk factors are often very strong (one thinks of BRCA variation and breast
cancer) but most are not, and some are very weak to start with and only strong
in rare contexts. Again, conscientious
geneticists know this very well, or should.
It’s not secret.
Indeed, the fact that minnows can grow up to be whales or
whales can shrink to minnows depending on the genomic and environmental pond
they’re swimming in, is one of the important things genomicists should be
directly addressing, rather than making the rather bold and expensive promises
that they are making.
This isn’t an argument against doing genetics, but it is a
reason to think differently, or at least carefully, before making very
expensive promises that often are not very different from what preachers
promise you if you’ll put some coin in the plate being passed.
Genetics is fundamental biology, and its challenges are
great from the ground up. At present, those
challenges are typically whales, but are just as typically, and expediently,
treated as if they are minnows.
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