Prevalence of sexual dimorphism in mammalian phenotypic traits

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Abstract

The role of sex in biomedical studies has often been overlooked, despite evidence of sexually dimorphic effects in some biological studies. Here, we used high-throughput phenotype data from 14,250 wildtype and 40,192 mutant mice (representing 2,186 knockout lines), analysed for up to 234 traits, and found a large proportion of mammalian traits both in wildtype and mutants are influenced by sex. This result has implications for interpreting disease phenotypes in animal models and humans.

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Karp, N. A., Mason, J., Beaudet, A. L., Benjamini, Y., Bower, L., Braun, R. E., … Rozman, J. (2017). Prevalence of sexual dimorphism in mammalian phenotypic traits. Nature Communications, 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms15475

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