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The debate rages on: Gay rights activists kiss
as they taken away by police officers during
a protest in St Petersburg. Photo: Reuters |
Why does a "gay gene" paper still cause a stir? A similar paper on
any other topic would probably have passed unnoticed. But this is sex
research – where public interest is huge but real funds and real science
are very scarce and stories get recycled.
A study which is not even yet a paper
was presented
in preliminary form on Valentine's Day by sex researcher Mike Bailey at
a conference in Chicago saying that there is a genetic component to
homosexuality. In fact, their study of 400 pairs of brothers, where at
least one was gay, confirmed a smaller controversial study from 20 years
before, and several twin studies in between. The 1993 study led the
Daily Mail to run one of
its most infamous headlines: "Abortion hope after gay genes finding".
The Bailey paper claims to have found large segments of
chromosomes containing hundreds of genes that are common in gay men. The
researchers admitted they couldn't find any specific "gay genes".
Last year, a paper in a relatively obscure journal also caused a public stir for
saying just the opposite.
The authors came up with a complicated biological explanation for why
gay men have more female relatives, tend to have older brothers and why
it involves testosterone in the womb and runs in families.
Controversially, they said it wasn't due to their genes, but to small
chemical signals that alter the genes (called
epigenetics) which can pass from one generation to the next, and had some (unclear) evolutionary advantage.
The study was undoubtedly clever and involved high-powered maths, but
was purely theoretical, didn't involve real people and made false
assumptions leading to fatal flaws.
Curious science
This latest round of reporting following the Bailey research has led to perhaps inevitable criticism that
we have an obsession with male homosexuality.
One reason people react so violently to these studies is a
lack of understanding of basic biology and science, and realising that
homosexuality is for a scientist just another human characteristic or
trait, like sporting ability, obesity, optimism or depression.
Almost all human traits studied have some genetic (heritable)
component, usually in the range of 30-70 per cent. Homosexuality in
males and females has a heritability in most studies of around 30-40 per
cent with plenty of room for environment. And there is no single gene
for any of these traits.
We have around 20,000 genes (about the same as worms) and
thousands of genes influence each behavioural trait to tiny extents. So
whether you believe it or not – the "gay gene" is a joke. No genes have
actually been found to consistently influence homosexuality solely
because genetic studies have been far too small; it took more than
34,000 people and 20 labs
to find one little gene variant that influenced 0.1 per cent of blood pressure – wow.
More controversial still
While researching
Identically Different, my book on
the effect of epigenetics on twins, I interviewed several sets of
identical twins where one was gay and one straight (which is more common
that than both being gay). All pairs were puzzled by their eventual
differences which often didn't emerge until well after puberty. In these
genetic clones, genes might explain their increased susceptibility but
clearly was not enough to be in any way "deterministic".
Importantly, while genes couldn't explain the differences,
the relatively new mechanism of epigenetics – which can differ between
twins – was the probable reason. When I discussed these results last
year on the radio, gay rights activists seemed to get even more upset at
the idea of epigenetics rather than plain genetics. They were worried
that as these changes were theoretically reversible, epigenetic drugs
might become a future anti-gay treatment in oppressive societies.
The complexity and randomness of possible epigenetic changes
combined with the biology and multiple influences on sexual preferences
makes this fear unfounded.
So we could (if someone wanted to pay for it) do a large
study of thousands of subjects, and find hundreds of "gay genes" of tiny
influence, but what would we do with them? As we see from the many
identical twin pairs who differ in sexual preferences – they would be
useless for prediction. If we found subtle epigenetic changes associated
with homosexuality this would certainly be interesting from a science
perspective, but wouldn't alter the political debate – although it would
certainly guarantee you great publicity for years to come.
Tim Spector is the author of the book Identically Different - Why you can change your genes. He is also Director of the Department of Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology at St Thomas'
Hospital, London.
This article was originally published on
The Conversation. Read the
original article.
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