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In Search of the Genetic Variants of Human Sex Ratio at Birth: Was Fisher Wrong About Sex Ratio Evolution?

Overview
Journal Proc Biol Sci
Specialty Biology
Date 2024 Oct 15
PMID 39406345
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Abstract

The human sex ratio (fraction of males) at birth is close to 0.5 at the population level, an observation commonly explained by Fisher's principle. However, past human studies yielded conflicting results regarding the existence of sex ratio-influencing mutations-a prerequisite to Fisher's principle, raising the question of whether the nearly even population sex ratio is instead dictated by the random X/Y chromosome segregation in male meiosis. Here we show that, because a person's offspring sex ratio (OSR) has an enormous measurement error, a gigantic sample is required to detect OSR-influencing genetic variants. Conducting a UK Biobank-based genome-wide association study that is more powerful than previous studies, we detect an OSR-associated genetic variant, which awaits verification in independent samples. Given the abysmal precision in measuring OSR, it is unsurprising that the estimated heritability of OSR is effectively zero. We further show that OSR's estimated heritability would remain virtually zero even if OSR is as genetically variable as the highly heritable human standing height. These analyses, along with simulations of human sex ratio evolution under selection, demonstrate the compatibility of the observed genetic architecture of human OSR with Fisher's principle and render it plausible that multiple OSR-influencing genetic variants segregate among humans.

Citing Articles

In search of the genetic variants of human sex ratio at birth: was Fisher wrong about sex ratio evolution?.

Song S, Zhang J Proc Biol Sci. 2024; 291(2033):20241876.

PMID: 39406345 PMC: 11479764. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2024.1876.

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