Post ‐genomic behavioral genetics: From revolution to routine

What was once expensive and revolutionary—full genome sequence—is now affordable and routine. Costs will continue to drop, opening up new frontiers in behavioral genetics. This shift in costs from the genome to the phenome is most notable in large clinical studies of behavior and associated diseases in cohorts that exceed hundreds of thousands of subjects. Examples include the Women's Health Initiative (www.whi.org), the Million Veterans Program (www.research.va.gov/MVP), the 100,000 Genomes Project (genomicsengland.co.uk), and commercial efforts such as those by deCode (www.decode.com) and 23andme (www.23andme.com). The same transition is happening in experimental neuro‐ and behavioral genetics, and samples sizes of many hundreds of cases are becoming routine (www.genenetwork.org, www.mousephenotyping.org). There are two major consequence of this new affordability of massive omics data sets: (1) It is now far more practical to explore genetic modulation of behavioral differences and the key role of gene‐by‐environment interactions. Researchers are already doing the hard part—the quantitative analysis of behavior. Adding the omics component can provide powerful links to molecules, cells, circuits, and even better treatment. (2) There is an acute need to highlight and train behavioral scientists in how best to exploit new omics approaches. This review addresses this second issue and highlights several new trends and opportunities that will be of interest to experts...
Source: Genes, Brain and Behavior - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Authors: Tags: REVIEW Source Type: research