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Nature, Nurture, and Behaviour Behavioural Genetics • • • • Genetic contribution to behaviour But also environmental role Interaction Could just as well say BG studies the role of environment on behaviour as that of genetics… Polygenic Traits • Single gene effects (relatively) easy to study and understand • Polygenic effects • Complex behaviour traits • Environmental interactions for both single and polygenic effects, but much more complex for the latter Heredity • Obviously important (and easily seen) in single gene effects • More difficult to assess heredity’s role in complex behaviour traits Synthesis • Quantitative genetics – Estimates degree to which differences among individuals due to genetic and environmental differences – Doesn’t identify specific genes or environmental factors • Molecular genetics – Identifies specific genes in behaviours Humans • Limited experimental designs • Ethics • Twin studies, adoption studies, naturally existing polymorphisms Non-human Animal Studies • Much more empirical control • Induce polymorphisms, transgenics, etc. • Even simpler: directed selective breeding studies and inbred strain studies Selected Breeding • Variability in individuals’ behaviour due to genetic variance • Variability can be exploited to show role of genetics on behaviour • Pick specific trait, cross-breed individuals with that trait for multiple generations • Can also study environmental effects this way – E.g., cross-fostering, different nutrition levels, training protocols, etc. Inbred Strain Studies • Brothers and sisters mated for at least 20 generations • Result is individuals that are virtual clones of all other members of strain • Any differences therefore due to environmental effects • Prenatal and postnatal environmental factors – Also, genetic factors, of course Techniques • Cross different strains to look at changes in behaviour across subsequent generations • Diallel design – Compares several inbred strains and all possible F1 crosses • Cross fostering – F1 crosses to mother from one strain or the other – Assess role of postnatal care • Environmental manipulation – Alter specific environmental factors to examine genotypeenvironmental interactions Scott & Fuller (1965) • 13 year study of hundreds of crossbreed and purebreed dogs – Beagle, Shetland sheep dog, African basenji, wirehaired fox terrier, American cocker spaniel • Behaviour patterns • Dogs perhaps the oldest domesticated species • High chromosomal similarity across breeds, but high behavioural differences; easily picked out by selective breeding (Borgaonkar et al., 1968) Critical Developmental Periods • Heightened sensitivity to specific environmental stimuli • Time critical • Gene-environmental interaction Puppy Toileting • Born blind and deaf, but excellent sense of smell • Mother needs to stimulate them to pass feces and urine – Mother consumes puppies’ waste; genetic programming to keep nest clean and free of smells that would attract predators – Activated by having litter; otherwise dogs not normally coprophagic • After 4 weeks, pups mobile • Nursing mother trains pups not to toilet near nest – Disciplining behaviour can appear harsh • Pups separated from mother too early don’t learn proper toileting – Subsequently have difficulties learning to be housebroken; critical period missed First Fear Period • Fear/hazard avoidance starts in pups at about 5 weeks, peaks between 8 to 10 weeks – Typically when people take puppy home • Easier to condition fear responses at this time • Fear of cars, fear of vet clinic, etc. • (Rawlinson, 2005) Farm-Fox Experiment • Domestication – “Self-domestication” from colonization of new ecological niches? (Morey 1994) – Intentional decisions by human beings? • Trut (1999): 40 year selective breeding study of 45,000 Russian silver foxes <http://i.pbase.com/o4/29/336929/1/58820261. T1333SilverFoxFaceOn.jpg> Patterns of Domestication • Darwin recognized similar changes in appearance and behaviour across species Appearance of dwarf and giant varieties Piebald coat colour Wavy or curly hair Rolled tails Shortened tails, fewer vertebrae Floppy ears Changes in reproductive cycle All All Sheep, poodles, donkeys, horses, pigs, goats, mice, guinea pigs Dogs, pigs Dogs, cats, sheep Dogs, cats, pigs, horses, sheep, goats, cattle All except sheep Selection • Dmitry Belyaev • Believed behaviour, not size or reproduction, was key factor in changes from domestication • Specifically, selection for amenability (tamability) • In 1959 started selected breeding of Vulpes vulpes for tamability One Change to Many • Balance of hormones and neurotransmitters at level of whole organism • Slight changes to regulatory genes for some trait (e.g., amenability to domestication) can have wide-ranging effects on endocrine system • Cascading effects on animal development, physiologically and behaviourally Belyaev’s Hypothesis • Two conditions required • Variations in tamability must be partly determined by genes • Domestication places animal under strong selective pressure <http://sybilsden.com/images/imgfox /darla-2006/07-2006/08darla14.jpg> Cross-Breeding Studies • Cross-bred foxes of different behaviour • Cross-fostered newborns • Transplanted embryos between donor and host mothers with different tamability levels • About 35% of variation in foxes’ defense response to people is genetically determined (i.e., heritability) Selective Pressure? • Attempted domestication of other wild-type animals • River otters (Lutra lutra) and gray rats (Rattus norvegicus) • Only 14-16% of wild-caught individuals showing weak defensive reactions produce offspring that survive to adulthood • Domestication puts animals under extreme stress and selective pressure The Experiment • 30 male and 100 female foxes, mostly from commercial fur farms in Estonia – So, already tamer than wild relatives • Selected for tameness alone – Only about 4-5% of male and 20% of female offspring allowed to breed • No training of foxes, minimal human contact – Ensures tameness due to genetic selection Behavioural Classes • Class III – Flee from experimenters or try to bite when handled • Class II – Let themselves be handled but show no emotionally friendly response • Class I – Friendly to experimenters, wagging tails and whining • Class IE – Domesticated “elite” – Eager for human contact, whimper to attract attention, sniff & lick experimenters like dogs – Appeared in sixth generation; by 10th gen. 18% of pups; by 20th gen., 35%; by 35th gen., 75% Physical Changes • Domesticated fox pups respond to sounds two days earlier and open eyes one day earlier than wild type • Fear response starts at 9 weeks in domesticated foxes (instead of 6 weeks in wild type) – More time to become incorporated into human social environment • Appearance: – – – – From 10th gen., changes in coat colour From 10th - 15th gen., floppy ears seen From 15th - 20th gen., tails and legs shortening These are still unusual traits, but more common than in wild-type Traits Days 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 4 6 Weeks 8 10 Farmed Foxes Domesticated Foxes Dogs Response to sound Eyes fully open Window of socialization Fear of unknown 12 Ontogenetic Changes • Changes in mechanisms regulating development • Effects on normal timing of embryonic and post-embryonic development Incidence of Change Characteristic Depigmentation (Star) Animals per 100,000 with trait Domesticated Nondomesticated Population Population 12,400 710 Increase in frequency (percent) +1,646 Brown mottling 450 86 +423 Gray hairs 500 100 +400 Floppy ears 230 170 +35 Short tail 140 2 +6,900 9,400 830 +1,033 Tail curled up Inbreeding? • Maybe changes due to recessive alleles – Would manifest from long-term inbreeding • Study designed to prevent this – Outbreeding with commercial fox farm animals – Inbreeding coefficients of 0.02-0.07 • Some of new traits are dominant, not recessive – Couldn’t have been hidden carriers in original population Star Gene • White patch on head • Affects migration rate of melanoblasts (embryonic precursors of pigment cells) – Melanoblasts form in embryonic neural crest, normally moving to embryo’s epidermis between 28-31 days after conception • Foxes with single Star gene – Melanoblasts’ movement delayed two days – Leads to death of “tardy” melanoblasts – Alters pigment pattern, producing star pattern Corticosteroids • Changes in plasma levels of corticosteroids, hormones linked to adaptation to stress • Adrenal glands producing less adrenalin – Hence, lowered stress response, and more tamable • Adrenalin also on biochemical pathway, linked to, among other things, melanin (pigment) – Changes in coat colour • • • • Different hormone levels have far-reaching effects Cascade of changes to behaviour and physiology Polygenic and environmental interaction Video Human Behaviour Studies • Essentially “observational” in nature • Limited to naturally occurring genetics and environmental variation • Adoption designs • Twin designs • Combination designs Adoption Designs • Traits running in families can be due to nature and/or nurture • Adoption studies can separate heredity and environmental factors Parents and Offspring • Genetically related family – Shared genes and environment • Adoption produces “genetic” (i.e., birth) and “environmental” (i.e., adoptive) parents – Comparing genetic parents and offspring assesses genetic contribution to parent-offspring similarity – Comparing environmental parents and offspring assesses post-natal environmental contribution to parent-offspring similarity Siblings • Similarly, genetic and environmental siblings • Again, comparisons made to assess genetic and post-natal environmental effects Designs • Adoptees’ study method – Examine incidence of trait in adopted away offspring of parents who possess the trait • Adoptees’ family method – Compare adopted offspring who possess trait and lack the trait of interest (control offspring) – Assess incidence of trait in the biological and adoptive families – Genetic influence if trait greater for biological relatives of affected adoptees than biological relatives of controls – Environmental influence if incidence greater for adoptive relatives of affected adoptees than biological relatives of controls Representative? • Are adopted parents and adopted children representative of general population? • Could be biases related to those parents who adopt and children who are adoptees • Some studies suggest no bias with respect to population, others raise questions Prenatal Environment • Can be difficult to assess this • Sometimes simply hard to get access to information about prenatal conditions of adopted children post-hoc • Various environmental factors could be different between mothers (and fathers) who keep, as opposed to give up, their offspring Selective Placement • Placement of adoptive children may not be random – E.g., certainly isn’t based on appearance • Preference for like characteristics between adoptive parents and offspring, inflates apparent correlation between biological parents and adopted-away children – Inflates effect of genes on behaviour Selective Placement (Adjusted) • Matches biological and adoptive parents • Genetic influences can increase correlations b/t adoptive parents and their adopted children • Environmental influence can increase correlations b/t biological parents and their adopted-away children Twin Designs • Monozygotic (MZ) – From single fertilized egg – Genotypically identical – Can be environmental differences, though • Dizygotic (DZ) twins – From separately fertilized eggs – Just siblings born at the same time – Genotypically different; share 50% genes • Allows examination of genetic and environmental variance of a behaviour (a phenotype) Relations • First degree relatives – 50% genetically related, r=0.5 (“coefficient of relatedness”) – E.g., parents and children, full non-MZ siblings • Second degree relatives – 25% genetically related, r=0.25 – E.g., grandparents and grandchildren, half-siblings • Third degree relatives – 12.5% genetically related, r=0.125 – E.g., cousins Equal Environment Assumption • Common to twin design methods • Assumes environmentally caused similarity about the same for both MZ and DZ twins • If MZ twins experienced more similar environments than DZ twins, then assumption would be violated • Studies show the assumption probably holds for most traits Prenatal Environment • Interestingly, MZ twins experience greater prenatal environmental differences than DZ twins • Competition for resources hypothesis – MZ twins identical, so require exactly same resources – Limited prenatal resources; competition produces prenatal stress Are Twins Representative? • Twins not representative of population • Often born prematurely, uterine environment more adverse – E.g., twins usually 30% lower in birth weight than singletons, slower language development, poorer performance on early verbal and IQ tests • However, most differences typically disappear by midchildhood – Shared and unique postnatal environmental effects Combination Designs • Combine family, adoptive, and twin methods • Twin and family methods – MZ twins have r=1.0 – Their children (i.e., cousins) will be r=0.25, not typical r=0.125 of cousins – Nephew of MZ male twins shares same r-value (0.5) with his father as his uncle, but there are different environmental factors in place • Step-family analysis – Get half-siblings (r=0.25) and full siblings (r=0.5) in same family – Different environmental effects for different children Heritability • Proportion of phenotypic variation in a population attributable to genetic variation among individuals • Variation among individuals may be due to genetic and/or environmental factors A Warning • Heritability measures always refer to degree of variation between individuals in a population • Can not be applied at level of individual • E.g., if heritability index of trait is 0.4 it is incorrect to say that 40% of this trait is from the parents and 60% is from the environment – In clones the heritability index for all traits is zero (all variability between individuals due to environment). Statistical Significance • Is similarity between genetically related individuals significantly greater than random? • Depends on sample size • Note that some significant effects really have very little “real” effect – I.e., account for little variance in a trait Effect Size • Extent to which individual differences for a trait in the population can be accounted for by the genetic difference among individuals • Effect of heritable genetic disability can be huge for an individual, but have little effect on population – E.g., if trait only exists in 1 in 10,000 individuals, little overall variation in trait for the entire population – Many statistically significant environmental effects in behavioural sciences have small effects in population Heritability • The genetic effect size on individuals • Often accounts for up to 50% of variance for behaviours • Heritability estimated from correlations for relatives • Consider 1st degree relative – Correlations reflect half of the effect of genes because only share 50% genome – Correlation = 0.5 --> trait heritability = 100% – Correlation = 0.25 --> trait heritability = 50% Origins • Heritability estimates go back to Francis Galton (1889) – Data showing relationship between offspring height as function of parental height – Slope of line is 0.57, which approximates heritability of traits when offspring values regressed against average traits in parents – If only one parent’s value is used, heritability is twice the slope – (Note: this is the source of the term “regression” -- offspring values will always regress to the mean value of the population; the slope is always less than one) <upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/3/38/ Galton-height-regress.jpg> Types of Heritability • Broad-sense – All sources of genetic variance – Indicates extent to which genetic factors of any kind are responsible for trait variation in the population • Narrow-sense – Proportion of phenotypic variance explained by additive genetic effects – Indicates extent to which a trait will “breed true” (I.e., degree of parent-offspring similarity to be expected) Broad-Sense Heritability • P = phenotype, G = genotype, E = environment so that P = G + E • Considering variance, Var(P) = Var(G)+Var(E) • H2 = Var(G)/Var(P) Narrow-Sense Heritability • Only the portion of the phenotypic variation that is allelic (“additive”) by nature • A = allelic contribution, so Var(A) is the allelic genetic variance • h2 = Var(A)/Var(P) Estimates • Only P can be observed directly • This makes estimating heritability difficult, requiring sophisticated statistical methods to measure genetic and environmental variance • Not so hard to do in non-human species – E.g., have same male mate with large number of females, thereby producing large number of different, but related, offspring – Ethics… • Human heritability studies typically rely on adoption and twin studies Correlation of Traits in Twins • If MZ and DZ twin correlations are the same, then heritability is estimated as zero. • If MZ twin correlations are 1.0 and DZ twin correlations are 0.5, then heritability is 100%. • Basically, heritability should be about twice the difference between MZ and DZ twins. Classic Twin Studies • Start with assessing variance of a behaviour in a large group, and attempting to estimate how much is due to: • Genetic effects (heritability) • Shared environment • Unique environment ACE Model • • • • A (additive, or allelic, genetics) C (common environment) E (unique environment) (More complex models also examine nonadditive genetics effects, D, for dominance) MZ and ACE • MZ twins raised in same family share 100% of their genes and all of the shared environment • Differences due to their unique environment • Correlation observed between MZ twins provides estimate of A+C DZ and ACE • DZ twins have the common shared environment, share 50% of their genes, and also have unique environment effects • The correlation here is an estimate of 0.5A+C Correlational Statistics • • • • • rMZ = A+C and rDZ = 0.5A+C, then A = 2(rMZ – rDZ) C = rMZ – A E = 1 - rMZ where rMZ and rDZ are the correlations of the trait in MZ and DZ twins, respectively Heritability Estimates • Heritability for nine psychological traits as estimated from twin studies. All sources are twins raised together (sample sizes shown inside bars). < upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ en/5/54/Heritability-from-twin-correlations1.jpg> Concordances • Disorders are diagnosed as either/or • Therefore, family resemblance is assessed by concordances, not correlations • Concordance: an index of risk • Typically means presence of the same trait in both members of a pair of twins • More correctly, the probability that a pair of individuals will both have a certain characteristic, given that one of the pair has the characteristic Concordances • Twin concordances for seven psychological traits (sample sizes inside bars) <upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/cf/Twin-concordances.jpg> Concordances • Because MZ twins are genetically identical, a genetic mutation carried by one will be carried by the other • Thus, knowing the concordance rate for a characteristic should help establish the extent to which a trait is caused by a genetic mutation Three Problems, Though • A given mutation may not have 100% penetrance (i.e., may have different phenotypic consequences in genetically identical individuals) • Unique environmental effects may be present in MZ individuals • If the trait is polygenic it becomes even more difficult to evaluate Penetrance • Proportion of individuals carrying a particular variation in a gene (genotype) that also express a particular trait (phenotype) Huntington’s Example • Known mutations for disease of 95% penetrance – 5% with dominant allele for Huntington’s don’t develop the disease and 95% do • Trinucleotide repeat of CAG (coding for amino acid glutamine) forms a polyglutamine (polyQ) chain • 36-39 repeats show reduced penetrance and/or later onset Age Related Penetrance • Example: multiple endocrine neoplasia 1 (MEN 1) – Parathyroid hyperplasia and pancreatic islet-cell and pituitary adenomas • Due to mutation in the menin gene on human chromosome 11q13 • Bessett et al. (1998) found age-related penetrance of MEN 1 to be 7% at age 10, but nearly 100% by age 60 Caveats • Heritability describes what is in a particular population at a particular time • Not what could be (or should be) • Genetic and/or environmental changes will also alter heritability estimates Within and Between Groups • Causes of individual differences in groups have no implications for causes of average differences between groups. • Heritability refers to the genetic contribution to differences among individuals within a group – Specific to time and place • High heritability within a group doesn’t necessarily mean that average differences between groups are due to genetic differences – Environmental factors could be very significant