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      Concepts and Misconceptions about the Polygenic Additive Model Applied to Disease

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      Human Heredity
      S. Karger AG

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          Abstract

          It is nearly one hundred years, since R.A. Fisher published his now famous paper that started the field of quantitative genetics. That paper reconciled Mendelian genetics (as exemplified by Mendel's peas) and the biometrical approach to quantitative traits (as exemplified by the correlation and regression approaches from Galton and Pearson), by showing that a simple model of many genes of small effects, each following Mendel's laws of segregation and inheritance, plus environmental variation could account for the observed resemblance between relatives. In this review, we discuss a number of concepts and misconceptions about the assumptions and limitations of polygenic models of common diseases in human populations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Human Heredity
          Hum Hered
          S. Karger AG
          0001-5652
          1423-0062
          August 31 2016
          September 1 2015
          : 80
          : 4
          : 165-170
          Article
          10.1159/000446931
          27576756
          47482092-592f-44d7-834f-830cddb26103
          © 2016
          History

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