Scientists may have finally solved the puzzle of what makes a person gay, and how it is passed from parents to their children.
A group of scientists suggested Tuesday
that homosexuals get that trait from their opposite-sex parents: A
lesbian will almost always get the trait from her father, while a gay
man will get the trait from his mother.
The hereditary link of homosexuality has long been established, but
scientists knew it was not a strictly genetic link, because there are
many pairs of identical twins who have differing sexualities. Scientists
from the National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis
say homosexuality seems to have an epigenetic, not a genetic link.
Long thought to have some sort of hereditary link, a group of
scientists suggested Tuesday that homosexuality is linked to epi-marks —
extra layers of information that control how certain genes are
expressed. These epi-marks are usually, but not always, "erased" between
generations. In homosexuals, these epi-marks aren't erased — they're
passed from father-to-daughter or mother-to-son, explains William Rice,
an evolutionary biologist at the University of California Santa Barbara and lead author of the study.
"There is compelling evidence that epi-marks contribute to both the
similarity and dissimilarity of family members, and can therefore
feasibly contribute to the observed familial inheritance of
homosexuality and its low concordance between [identical] twins," Rice
notes.
Rice and his team created a mathematical model that explains why
homosexuality is passed through epi-marks, not genetics. Evolutionarily
speaking, if homosexuality was solely a genetic trait, scientists would
expect the trait to eventually disappear because homosexuals wouldn't be
expected to reproduce. But because these epi-marks provide an
evolutionary advantage for the parents of homosexuals: They protect
fathers of homosexuals from underexposure to testosterone and mothers of
homosexuals from overexposure to testosterone while they are in
gestation.
"These epi-marks protect fathers and mothers from excess or
underexposure to testosterone — when they carry over to opposite-sex
offspring, it can cause the masculinization of females or the
feminization of males," Rice says, which can lead to a child becoming
gay. Rice notes that these markers are "highly variable" and that only
strong epi-marks will result in a homosexual offspring.
Though scientists have long suspected some sort of genetic link, Rice
says studies attempting to explain why people are gay have been few and
far between.
"Most mainstream biologists have shied away from studying it because
of the social stigma," he says. "It's been swept under the rug, people
are still stuck on this idea that it's unnatural. Well there are many
examples of homosexuality in nature, it's very common." Homosexual
behavior has been observed in black swans, penguins, sheep, and other
animals, he says.
Rice's model still needs to be tested on real-life parent-offspring
pairs, but he says this epigenetic link makes more sense than any other
explanation, and that his team has mapped out a way for other scientists
to test their work.
"We've found a story that looks really good," he says. "There's more
verification needed, but we point out how we can easily do epigenetic
profiles genome-wide. We predict where the epi-marks occur, we just need
other studies to look at it empirically. This can be tested and proven
within six months. It's easy to test. If it's a bad idea, we can throw
it away in short order."
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