Last updated:
Author(s):
Carrie Zhu, Matthew J. Ming, Jared M. Cole, Michael D. Edge, Mark Kirkpatrick, Arbel Harpak
Publish date:
6 April 2023
Journal:
Cell Genomics
PubMed ID:
37228747

Abstract

Sex differences in complex traits are suspected to be in part due to widespread gene-by-sex interactions (GxSex), but empirical evidence has been elusive. Here, we infer the mixture of ways in which polygenic effects on physiological traits covary between males and females. We find that GxSex is pervasive but acts primarily through systematic sex differences in the magnitude of many genetic effects (“amplification”) rather than in the identity of causal variants. Amplification patterns account for sex differences in trait variance. In some cases, testosterone may mediate amplification. Finally, we develop a population-genetic test linking GxSex to contemporary natural selection and find evidence of sexually antagonistic selection on variants affecting testosterone levels. Our results suggest that amplification of polygenic effects is a common mode of GxSex that may contribute to sex differences and fuel their evolution.

Related projects

At many sites in the human genome, there is one variant that is beneficial to female survival but detrimental to males, and another variant with…

Institution:
University of Texas (UT Austin), United States of America

All projects