logo
How your genes interact with your environment changes your disease risk − new research counts the ways

How your genes interact with your environment changes your disease risk − new research counts the ways

Yahoo14-05-2025
Sitting in my doctor's examination room, I was surprised when she told me, 'Genetics don't really matter for chronic disease.' Rather, she continued, 'A person's lifestyle, what they eat, and how much they exercise, determine whether they get heart disease.'
As a researcher who studies the genetics of disease, I don't fully disagree – lifestyle factors play a large role in determining who gets a disease and who doesn't. But they are far from the entire story. Since scientists mapped out the human genome in 2003, researchers have learned that genetics also play a large role in a person's disease risk.
Studies that focus on estimating disease heritability – that is, how much genetic differences explain differences in disease risk – usually attribute a substantial fraction of disease variation to genetics. Mutations across the entire genome seem to play a role in diseases such as Type 2 diabetes, which is about 17% heritable, and schizophrenia, which is about 80% heritable. In contrast to diseases such as Tay-Sachs or cystic fibrosis, where mutations in a single gene cause a disease, chronic diseases tend to be polygenic, meaning they're influenced by multiple mutations at many genes across the whole genome.
Every complex disease has both genetic and environmental risk factors. Most researchers study these factors separately because of technical challenges and a lack of large, uniform datasets. Although some have devised techniques to overcome these challenges, they haven't yet been applied to a comprehensive set of diseases and environmental exposures.
In our recently published research, my colleague Alkes Price and I developed tools to leverage newly available datasets to quantify the joint effects that genetic and environmental risk factors have on the biology underlying disease.
To illustrate the effect gene-environment interactions have on disease, let's consider the example of aspirin use and colon cancer.
In 2001, researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center were studying how regularly taking aspirin decreased the risk of colon cancer. They wondered whether genetic mutations that slowed down how quickly the body broke down aspirin – meaning aspirin levels in the body would stay high longer – might increase the drug's protective effect against colon cancer. They were right: Only patients with slow aspirin metabolism had a decreased risk of colon cancer, indicating that the effectiveness of a drug can depend on a person's genetics.
This raises the question of how genetics and different combinations of environmental exposures, such as the medications a patient is taking, can affect a person's disease risk and how effective a treatment will be for them. How many cases of genetic variations directly influencing a drug's effectiveness are there?
The gene-environment interaction of colon cancer and aspirin is unusual. It involves a mutation at a single location in the genome that has a big effect on colon cancer risk. The past 25 years of human genetics have shown researchers that these sorts of large-effect mutations are rare.
For example, an analysis found that the median effect of a genetic variant on height is only 0.14 millimeters. Instead, there are usually hundreds of variations that each have small but cumulative effects on a person's disease risk, making them hard to find.
How could researchers detect these small gene-environment interactions across hundreds of spots in the genome?
We started by looking for cases where genetic variants across the genome showed different effects on a person's biology in different environments. Rather than trying to detect the small effects of each genetic variant one at a time, we aggregated data across the entire genome to turn these small individual effects into a large, genome-wide effect.
Using data from the UK Biobank – a large database containing genetic and health data from about 500,000 people – we estimated the influence of millions of genetic variants on 33 complex traits and diseases, such as height and asthma. We grouped people based on environmental exposures such as air pollution, cigarette smoking and dietary patterns. Finally, we developed statistical tests to study how the effects of genetics on disease risk and biomarker levels varied with these exposures.
We found three types of gene-environment interactions.
First, we found 19 pairs of complex traits and environmental exposures that are influenced by genetic variants across the genome. For example, the effect of genetics on white blood cell levels in the body differed between smokers and nonsmokers. When we compared the effects of genetic mutations between the two groups, the strength of gene-environment interaction suggested that smoking changes the way genetics influence white blood cell counts.
Second, we looked for cases where the heritability of a trait varies depending on the environment. In other words, rather than some genetic variants having different effects in different environments, all of them are made stronger in some environments. For example, we found that the heritability of body mass index – the ratio of weight to height – increased by 5% for the most active people. This means genetics plays a larger role in BMI the more active you are. We found 28 such trait-environment pairs, including HDL cholesterol levels and alcohol consumption, as well as neuroticism and self-reported sleeplessness.
Third, we looked for a type of gene-environment interaction called proportional or joint amplification. Here, genetic effects grow with increased environmental exposures, and vice versa. This results in a relatively equal balance of genetic and environmental effects on a trait. For example, as self-reported time spent watching television increased, both genetic and environmental variance increased for a person's waist-to-hip ratio. This likely reflects the influence of other behaviors related to time spent watching television, such as decreased physical exercise. We found 15 such trait-environment pairs, including lung capacity and smoking, and glucose levels and alcohol consumption.
We also looked for cases where biological sex, instead of environmental exposures, influenced interactions with genes. Previous work had shown evidence of these gene-by-sex interactions, and we found additional examples of the effects of biological sex on all three types of gene-environment interactions. For example, we found that neuroticism had genetic effects that varied across sex.
Finally, we also found that multiple types of gene-environment interactions can affect the same trait. For example, the effects of genetics on systolic blood pressure varied by sex, indicating that some genetic variants have different effects in men and women.
How do we make sense of these distinct types of gene-environment interactions? We argue that they can help researchers better understand the underlying biological mechanisms that lead from genetic and environmental risks to disease, and how genetic variation leads to differences in disease risk between people.
Genes related to the same function work together in a unit called a pathway. For example, we can say that genes involved in making heme – the component of red blood cells that carries oxygen – are collectively part of the heme synthesis pathway. The resulting amounts of heme circulating in the body influence other biological processes, including ones that could lead to the development of anemia and cancer. Our model suggests that environmental exposures modify different parts of these pathways, which may explain why we saw different types of gene-environment interactions.
In the future, these findings could lead to treatments that are more personalized based on a person's genome. For example, clinicians might one day be able to tell whether someone is more likely to decrease their risk of heart disease by taking weight loss drugs or by exercising.
Our results show how studying gene-environment interactions can tell researchers not only about which genetic and environmental factors increase your risk of disease, but also what goes wrong in the body where.
This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Arun Durvasula, University of Southern California
Read more:
Your environment affects how well your medications work − identifying exactly how could make medicine better
People don't mate randomly – but the flawed assumption that they do is an essential part of many studies linking genes to diseases and traits
Researchers uncovered hundreds of genes linked to OCD, providing clues about how it changes the brain − new research
Arun Durvasula has received funding from the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of Science.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New species of 'Jurassic sea monster' identified in old fossil
New species of 'Jurassic sea monster' identified in old fossil

Indianapolis Star

time06-08-2025

  • Indianapolis Star

New species of 'Jurassic sea monster' identified in old fossil

Paleontology researchers in Europe have identified a new species of ancient marine reptile – often referred to as a "Jurassic sea monster" or "sea dragon" – that existed nearly 183 million years ago. The newly classified species of plesiosaur (Plesionectes longicollum, which means "early swimmer with long neck"), likely had the distinction of having the longest neck of other plesiosaurs during the Early Jurassic period (from about 174.7 to 201.4 million years ago), said Sven Sachs of the Naturkunde-Museum Bielefeld, the study's lead author. The bones of the reptile – not a dinosaur – were found in 1978 by Gotthilf Fischer, owner of a quarry and a small museum in Holzmaden, Germany, wrote Sachs and co-author Daniel Madzia from the Polish Academy of Sciences in the journal PeerJ Life & Environment on Aug. 4. The Holzmaden region in southwest Germany has historically been a hotbed for Jurassic period discoveries including other species of plesiosaurs, which were piscivorous reptiles (they fed on fish), thalattosuchians (marine crocodiles), and dolphin-like marine reptiles known as ichthyosaurs, which have been found to be as long as 65 feet. Jupiter-Venus conjunction: How to see our solar system's 2 brightest planets in August Other researchers had noted the distinguishing characteristics of the plesiosaur's skeleton, which is in the Stuttgart State Museum of Natural History. "This specimen has been in collections for decades, but previous studies never fully explored its distinctive anatomy," Sachs said in a news release about the research. "Our detailed examination revealed an unusual combination of skeletal features that clearly distinguish it from all previously known plesiosaurs." The new species had at least 43 vertebrae and perhaps as many as 45 – the remains of the plesiosaur's skull is smashed and not as well-preserved – "the long neck is special for a plesiosaur from the Lower Jurassic," Sachs told USA TODAY. In addition to a very long neck, Plesionectes longicollum had "a rather small head," Sachs said. But it "was an agile swimmer with paddle like limbs." The reptile also had more back vertebrae than most other plesiosaurs of the period and had V-shaped joints between vertebrae in the neck and chest, he said. This newly-identified plesiosaur measured about 10.5 feet and is the oldest known plesiosaur found in the region, where the Tethys Sea covered much of Europe into the Cenozoic era, which began 66 million years ago. Fossils of plesiosaurs have been dated back to the Triassic period about 250 million years ago into the Cretaceous period, before dinosaurs vanished about 65 million years ago, according to Britannica. Plesiosaurs were known to have lived in North America, Asia and Australia, and in the Pacific Ocean and European seas. Plesiosaurs devoured all manner of marine life including squid and other plesiosaurs. But those with a long neck, such as Plesionectes longicollum, "mainly ate fish," Sachs said. Some of the bones suggest the fossil represents "not an adult but more a older juvenile or young subadult," he said. "But it is possible … that it was an adult that retained anatomical features one would expect in a juvenile." Regardless, the identification reveals another form of prehistoric life in a region already fertile for fossil finds. "This discovery adds another piece to the puzzle of marine ecosystem evolution during a critical time in Earth's history," Madzia said in a statement. "The early Toarcian period when this animal lived was marked by significant environmental changes, including a major oceanic anoxic event that affected marine life worldwide." That period of global warming in the Jurassic period, scientists say, led to loss of oxygen in water and the extinction of many species. The identification of a new pleisosaur in the Holzmaden region – this brings the findings up to six different kinds – "shows that the fauna there was quite diverse," Sachs said. Mike Snider is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can follow him on Threads, Bluesky, X and email him at mikegsnider & @ & @mikesnider & msnider@

New species of 'Jurassic sea monster' identified in old fossil
New species of 'Jurassic sea monster' identified in old fossil

USA Today

time05-08-2025

  • USA Today

New species of 'Jurassic sea monster' identified in old fossil

Paleontology researchers in Europe have identified a new species of ancient marine reptile – often referred to as a "Jurassic sea monster" or "sea dragon" – that existed nearly 183 million years ago. The newly classified species of plesiosaur (Plesionectes longicollum, which means "early swimmer with long neck"), likely had the distinction of having the longest neck of other plesiosaurs during the Early Jurassic period (from about 174.7 to 201.4 million years ago), said Sven Sachs of the Naturkunde-Museum Bielefeld, the study's lead author. The bones of the reptile – not a dinosaur – were found in 1978 by Gotthilf Fischer, owner of a quarry and a small museum in Holzmaden, Germany, wrote Sachs and co-author Daniel Madzia from the Polish Academy of Sciences in the journal PeerJ Life & Environment on Aug. 4. The Holzmaden region in southwest Germany has historically been a hotbed for Jurassic period discoveries including other species of plesiosaurs, which were piscivorous reptiles (they fed on fish), thalattosuchians (marine crocodiles), and dolphin-like marine reptiles known as ichthyosaurs, which have been found to be as long as 65 feet. Jupiter-Venus conjunction: How to see our solar system's 2 brightest planets in August Other researchers had noted the distinguishing characteristics of the plesiosaur's skeleton, which is in the Stuttgart State Museum of Natural History. "This specimen has been in collections for decades, but previous studies never fully explored its distinctive anatomy," Sachs said in a news release about the research. "Our detailed examination revealed an unusual combination of skeletal features that clearly distinguish it from all previously known plesiosaurs." The new species had at least 43 vertebrae and perhaps as many as 45 – the remains of the plesiosaur's skull is smashed and not as well-preserved – "the long neck is special for a plesiosaur from the Lower Jurassic," Sachs told USA TODAY. In addition to a very long neck, Plesionectes longicollum had "a rather small head," Sachs said. But it "was an agile swimmer with paddle like limbs." The reptile also had more back vertebrae than most other plesiosaurs of the period and had V-shaped joints between vertebrae in the neck and chest, he said. What did the newly discovered Jurassic sea monster eat? This newly-identified plesiosaur measured about 10.5 feet and is the oldest known plesiosaur found in the region, where the Tethys Sea covered much of Europe into the Cenozoic era, which began 66 million years ago. Fossils of plesiosaurs have been dated back to the Triassic period about 250 million years ago into the Cretaceous period, before dinosaurs vanished about 65 million years ago, according to Britannica. Plesiosaurs were known to have lived in North America, Asia and Australia, and in the Pacific Ocean and European seas. Plesiosaurs devoured all manner of marine life including squid and other plesiosaurs. But those with a long neck, such as Plesionectes longicollum, "mainly ate fish," Sachs said. Some of the bones suggest the fossil represents "not an adult but more a older juvenile or young subadult," he said. "But it is possible … that it was an adult that retained anatomical features one would expect in a juvenile." Regardless, the identification reveals another form of prehistoric life in a region already fertile for fossil finds. "This discovery adds another piece to the puzzle of marine ecosystem evolution during a critical time in Earth's history," Madzia said in a statement. "The early Toarcian period when this animal lived was marked by significant environmental changes, including a major oceanic anoxic event that affected marine life worldwide." That period of global warming in the Jurassic period, scientists say, led to loss of oxygen in water and the extinction of many species. The identification of a new pleisosaur in the Holzmaden region – this brings the findings up to six different kinds – "shows that the fauna there was quite diverse," Sachs said. Mike Snider is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can follow him on Threads, Bluesky, X and email him at mikegsnider & @ & @mikesnider & msnider@ What's everyone talking about? Sign up for our trending newsletter to get the latest news of the day

CEO Says New Tool Allows Couples To 'Genetically Optimize Their Children'
CEO Says New Tool Allows Couples To 'Genetically Optimize Their Children'

Newsweek

time19-06-2025

  • Newsweek

CEO Says New Tool Allows Couples To 'Genetically Optimize Their Children'

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The CEO of a U.S.-based biotech company that developed software to enable parents to select embryos used for in vitro fertilization (IVF) based on genetic markers, told Newsweek that this "genetic optimization" would help people "live longer and thrive." Kian Sadeghi created his DNA testing and analysis company Nucleus to "give parents direct insights into whatever matters most to them when they choose their embryo." Nucleus offers the world's first genetic optimization software that allows parents to have preferences over their child's genetics during the IVF process, with the aim of reducing preventable genetic disease. "There's no moment when parents need to know how genetics will impact them and their loved ones more than when they're preparing to start a family," Sadeghi said. Genetic disease impacts millions of children in the U.S., with Down syndrome, Thalassemia, cystic fibrosis, Tay-Sachs disease and sickle cell disease among the most common. As well as screening for these sorts of conditions, Nucleus also analyses embryos for chronic conditions like Alzheimer's disease and heart disease. In total, it checks for almost 1,000 traits and conditions, from cystic fibrosis to heart disease, cancer risks, and mental health conditions like anxiety and ADHD. Kian Sadeghi, CEO of biotech company Nucleus, told Newsweek that "genetic optimization" would help people "live longer and thrive." Kian Sadeghi, CEO of biotech company Nucleus, told Newsweek that "genetic optimization" would help people "live longer and thrive." Newsweek/Getty Images/Canva Sadeghi said that many families "have experienced death at the hands of these common conditions and seek to prevent similar suffering." He told Newsweek that his own experience of the loss and grief brought on by genetic disease was actually what guided him to set up his company. When he was 7 years old, his 15 year-old cousin suddenly died in her sleep from what he said was a "preventable genetic disease." "My parents were heartbroken and terrified that my siblings and I would have the same fate," he said. Being so young at the time, Sadeghi said "it didn't make sense to me why someone would drop dead at 15, when other 15-year-olds are fine." He said that the loss of his cousin was the the first time he "intuitively grasped this idea of generational health." "Seeing this genetic lottery, when someone wins and someone doesn't, really stuck with me," he said. As he grew up, he developed a keen interest in genetics in school and by the time he got to college he was determined to create software that "could prevent what happened to my family from happening to anyone else in the world." After dropping out of the University of Pennsylvania, he then set up Nucleus in 2020, and believes that his software will spare families from the grief he himself felt when he lost a loved one to a preventable genetic disease. Kian Sadeghi, CEO of Nucleus, a company that has developed software to help parents screen their embryos for genetic conditions. Kian Sadeghi, CEO of Nucleus, a company that has developed software to help parents screen their embryos for genetic conditions. Uncredited/Nucleus Sadeghi added that his company is "democratizing access to genetic information," as at the moment, he said genetic testing results can be hard to decipher without a clear explanation from a doctor. "We're putting comprehensive, actionable data directly in parents' hands with tools that let them actually understand and compare their options," Sadeghi said. However, given that the software allows parents to genetically "optimize" their children, it raises various ethical questions, ones which members of the public have taken to social media to ask. Some social media users on X, formerly known as Twitter, voiced their concern that genetic screening could have unknown, secondary impacts, while others criticized Nucleus for oversimplifying the issue, saying "we can't predict longevity even for adults, so how can we possibly do this for embryos." Discussing ethical issues raised by the public, Sadeghi said, "until now, how this science would impact how we have children and how we would deploy it has been discussed only behind closed doors—not in public." He said now that Nucleus has announced the availability of the technology, the public has the opportunity to "listen to each other, hear each other out, and use this information to establish their views to ensure the insight Nucleus Embryo can provide is put to good use." Sadeghi added that the best way to have the public understand the technology was "to have them use it," and that it was important to make it accessible to as many people as possible. There have also been concerns raised about whether genetically optimizing IQ in embryos could increase risk of mental health conditions like schizophrenia. Sadeghi said that his company's report on schizophrenia risk for embryos noted that the condition is linked to both bipolar disorder, as well as intelligence, and that ADHD, OCD, Alzheimer's disease and autism were also linked to intelligence. He added that "we always educate parents on links between high disposition to neurological diseases and exceptional traits." "When you analyze genes for disease risk, you're also uncovering insights into traits, since both share a common genetic foundation," he said. The software, while being offered to parents to help them prevent their children from developing genetic disease, therefore does come with ethical considerations—considerations which will continue to be explored and discussed in public, now that the technology has brought the issue into the spotlight.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store