Absence of evidence for MHC-dependent mate selection within HapMap populations

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Abstract

The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) of immunity genes has been reported to influence mate choice in vertebrates, and a recent study presented genetic evidence for this effect in humans. Specifically, greater dissimilarity at the MHC locus was reported for European-American mates (parents in HapMap Phase 2 trios) than for non-mates. Here we show that the results depend on a few extreme data points, are not robust to conservative changes in the analysis procedure, and cannot be reproduced in an equivalent but independent set of European-American mates. Although some evidence suggests an avoidance of extreme MHC similarity between mates, rather than a preference for dissimilarity, limited sample sizes preclude a rigorous investigation. In summary, fine-scale molecular-genetic data do not conclusively support the hypothesis that mate selection in humans is influenced by the MHC locus. © 2010 Derti et al.

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Derti, A., Cenik, C., Kraft, P., & Roth, F. P. (2010). Absence of evidence for MHC-dependent mate selection within HapMap populations. PLoS Genetics, 6(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000925

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