Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT:
SUBMITTER: Howrigan DP
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4803638 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Jun
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Howrigan D P DP Simonson M A MA Davies G G Harris S E SE Tenesa A A Starr J M JM Liewald D C DC Deary I J IJ McRae A A Wright M J MJ Montgomery G W GW Hansell N N Martin N G NG Payton A A Horan M M Ollier W E WE Abdellaoui A A Boomsma D I DI DeRosse P P Knowles E E M EE Glahn D C DC Djurovic S S Melle I I Andreassen O A OA Christoforou A A Steen V M VM Hellard S L SL Sundet K K Reinvang I I Espeseth T T Lundervold A J AJ Giegling I I Konte B B Hartmann A M AM Rujescu D D Roussos P P Giakoumaki S S Burdick K E KE Bitsios P P Donohoe G G Corley R P RP Visscher P M PM Pendleton N N Malhotra A K AK Neale B M BM Lencz T T Keller M C MC
Molecular psychiatry 20150922 6
Inbreeding depression refers to lower fitness among offspring of genetic relatives. This reduced fitness is caused by the inheritance of two identical chromosomal segments (autozygosity) across the genome, which may expose the effects of (partially) recessive deleterious mutations. Even among outbred populations, autozygosity can occur to varying degrees due to cryptic relatedness between parents. Using dense genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data, we examined the degree to which ...[more]