How choosing genetically similar partners shapes our genomes

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Chances are, youโ€™re going to marry someone a lot like you. Similar intelligence, similar height, similar body weight. A new study of tens of thousands of married couples suggests that this isnโ€™t an accident. We donโ€™t marry educated people because we happen to hang around with educated people, for exampleโ€”we actively seek them out. And these preferences are shaping our genomes.

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[Researchers] found aย strong statistical correlation between peopleโ€™s genetic markers for height and the actual height of their partner. They also found a statistically significant, but weaker, correlation between peopleโ€™s genes for BMI and actual BMI in partners: People had actively chosen partners with similar genes to themselves.

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Such assortative mating increases relatedness in families and can help their offspring survive better as long as the trait under selection (larger size, for example) continues to be beneficialโ€”helping males acquire and fend off mates, for example.

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Assortative mating boosts the odds that a trait, such as height, will be passed to offspring. That has implications for genetic models that predict how likely it is that members of a family will inherit a trait, whether itโ€™s a disease such as schizophrenia or a physical trait, such as height.

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post: Your choice of a life partner is no accident

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