The Good News Is That One Side Has Definitively Won The Missing Heritability Debate
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Dec 17, 2025 The podcast dives into the intriguing debate over missing heritability in genetics. Twin studies suggest high genetic influence, while molecular studies find much lower figures. A new approach using whole-genome analysis reveals that most heritability can be captured, but interpretations vary. Nurturists argue that environmental factors play a larger role, despite the new findings. Additionally, complexities in measuring traits like IQ raise questions about genetic reliability. The discussion showcases the ongoing tension and unresolved nature of heredity versus nurture.
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Missing Heritability Defined And Studied
- Twin and molecular genetic studies historically disagreed: twins show ~50%+ heritability while molecular methods found ~10–20%.
- The new whole-genome study (Wainschtein, Yengo et al.) aimed to close that 'missing heritability' gap by including rare variants.
Pedigree Approach With 347,630 Brits
- The researchers built a pedigree-style map of 347,630 British participants to compare trait similarity across relatives.
- They then compared non-relatives' trait similarity to tiny differences in genetic similarity to estimate molecular heritability including rare variants.
Rare Variants Recover Most Missing Heritability
- Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) captured about 88% of pedigree-based narrow-sense heritability across traits.
- This suggests rare variants explain most of the previously 'missing' genetic influence for many traits.
