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PSYC 3102: Introduction to Behavioral Genetics Lecture 13 Association Studies How a gene relates to a trait 2 kinds: Pop’n Based and Family Based Population-based designs – controls are from the general population o Get people with disorder (ex: major affect disorder), then get controls o Then genotype for particular gene or genes (like serotonin transporter) o Conclude if that locus is associated with MAD (ex. Short and long forms because of a repeat polymorphism) phenotype ADHD SS SL 10 LL Total 35 55 100 40 40 100 (# of people) Control 20 o Easy to conduct o But population stratification is a problem – allele frequencies are associated with sub-populations; allel frequencies can be associated with ethnicity Example: phenotype Sickle cell Normal Skin Pigmentation Gene LL DL DD Low-Zero High Number High Number Total 100 100 But skin pigmentation does NOT have any kind of causal relationship with the disease!! - vast majority of sickle cell individuals have African ancestry Family-based designs – use genetic relatives as controls o This avoids problems of ethnicity and population stratification o Often use siblings as controls Example: Family MAD sibling Normal sibling #L in ADHD - #L in normal Smith LL SL 2–1=1 Jones SL SS 1–0=1 Etc. If there is no association, the mean of the last column should be about 0 If mean of last column is >0; L allele confers risk If mean is <0; S allele confers risk Much more difficult to execute these studies Discussion of Article Comments of Class: Very vague Unnecessary N vs. N debate Not enough mention of environment Learn to control behavior Biased to Nature, but courts are currently very Nurture-biased Test for gene only after crime is committed??? Or before? Not full penetrance Prediction and prevention… false positives What about male/female differences in aggression? Family Criminal Normal Smith XY XX # of Y chromosomes 1–0=1 Jones XY XX 1–0=1 Etc. 9 to 1 ratio of men to women with violent crimes In this sense the Y chromosome has a VERY high association with violent crimes, it is a genetic marker in this sense But, does the Y chromosome cause crime????? This is just a statistical association HOW do genes and environment interact? Y is a predictor, but not the whole picture Association studies don’t tell you HOW!! Case by case Issues of genetic discrimination; examples: cancer and insurances; lay persons interpretations Fragile X child example – hit sibling with a bat, caused major brain damage – do you treat that child the same? Or based on genes? Can treat differently without being more lenient What is sentencing designed to do? Rehabilitate or Stop from recurring or Retribution?