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Is there a gay gene? |
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| Jun8-12, 11:07 AM | #1 |
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Is there a gay gene?
Some background information: I had a really close friend of mine ask me if gays were born that way or if it's a choice. From the knowledge that I learned from the teachers at my school, I answered him saying that gays are just born that way, and they do not find out until they're teenagers.
Unfortunately, I was afraid that I may be misleading him so I told him I'll do some research to make sure that I am giving him right information, because my knowledge was pretty much from one health teacher from the ninth grade. Doing a quick good search led to a lot of biased information, so before I waste my time with a proper scholar search, I figured I'd ask PhysicsForums for their unbiased responses to the following questions: Are gay people born the way they are? Or is it something they learn? If you answer to "yes, gay people are born that way" to the previous question, is it still possible to be gay without being born that way? If they are born that way, it it something they inherit? If it's something they inherit, is there a particular gene? I would really appreciate unbiased responses to the above information. It would be appreciated if you could enforce your arguments with credible studies. Please do not bring religion views or opinions into this. |
| Jun8-12, 01:23 PM | #2 |
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As with anything humans do the answer is that "it's complicated".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biology...al_orientation ... fwiw: should provide you with some idea as to why your questions don't have the kind of answers you are looking for. |
| Jun8-12, 07:43 PM | #3 |
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Is there a verifiably unbiased source on this point?
I think the proper answer to the questions actually needs a little more information. We need to know the context of the debate - what do you want to know for? If it is just intellectual curiosity then OP may have to settle for "we don't know enough yet". It does not look like there is much evidence to support the idea that there is a gene for homosexuality like there is a gene for blue eyes. However, there does seem to be evidence to support some genetic component to developing sexual orientation. There is a lot to suggest that orientation, once established, stays that way; and trying to alter it causes more problems than it solves. But if the context is that if homosexuality is a mix of genes, hormones, and environment ... then you can bring up your kid to be heterosexual if you just avoid particular environmental factors -- then the resulting answer is a bit different. When a question becomes politically charged, we need to be careful of how it is framed. Having slept on it - I think I can manage a pretty neutral stance ... lets see... * Are gay people born the way they are? Or is it something they learn? ... ans. it's complicated - it is unclear that you can be born gay the same way you are born right-handed. However, there is some evidence to support the idea that your sexual orientation is not very voluntary. * is it still possible to be gay without being born that way? ... ans. yep - you can exhibit homosexual behavior without being homosexual just like homosexuals can exhibit heterosexual behavior (have children, get married, go to gay-hating churches etc) and have done in history. Another example would be practising so you can write with similar proficiency with either hand regardless of your preference. More controversially, it is possible to be a man without the Y chromosome ... in the sense that you exhibit the male human physical and behavioral traits. So it boild down to what you think of as "being" a particular way. * If they are born that way, it it something they inherit? ... ans. if there is a gene for it, or a genetic predisposition, it would be a heritable trait. If it's something they inherit, is there a particular gene? ... ans. it does not have to be the case: there could be a combination of genes which code of different things which give rise to a predisposition towards a particular sexual orientation. |
| Jun8-12, 07:55 PM | #4 |
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Is there a gay gene?
Its not unknown. There's genes associated with homosexuality, but having the gene doesn't mean you're going to be homosexual.
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| Jun8-12, 08:28 PM | #5 |
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You have a reference to back that up of course?
ifaik no such gene has been isolated. Rather there is evidence to support a genetic component to sexual orientation. |
| Jun8-12, 09:24 PM | #6 |
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| Jun8-12, 11:25 PM | #7 |
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@atyy: that's actually pretty representative of the research.
You have a lot of correlations without a clear mechanism. Probably time to hear from OP :) |
| Jun9-12, 12:51 PM | #8 |
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The large problem is of course defining what constitutes the behavior, and once you do, you find degeneracy (the behavior can still arise without the underlying known genetic associations and the behavior can fail to arise in someone who has the underlying genetic associations). Gonococcal strains from homosexual men have outer membranes with reduced permeability to hydrophobic molecules. http://iai.asm.org/content/37/2/432.short a statistical monozygotic twin study: http://bjp.rcpsych.org/content/148/4/421.short It's more likely to be associated with left-handers (who often have flipped brain symmetry): http://www.sciencedirect.com/science...2839328790100X Evidence for maternally inherited factors favouring male homosexuality and promoting female fecundity: http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.o...554/2217.short |
| Jun9-12, 03:52 PM | #9 |
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This is much more complicated than I expected it to be. :|
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| Jun9-12, 05:16 PM | #10 |
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There may be some dispassionate evidence in support of the idea that homosexuality does have a genetic origin. There is undoubtedly also plenty of dispassionate evidence that human homosexuality is far more of a social phenomenon than a biological one. But it is abundantly clear that there is no gay gene. No more than there is an alcoholic gene, or a ‘thrill seeking’ gene. All of these ideas are founded on a misunderstanding. Behavioural traits, like morphological traits are not traced to individual genes. There are likely several genes involved and quite possibly dozens. But even identifying every single gene involved does not give you your answer for how that trait comes about. It is not just a question of the genes themselves but the sequence in which they are expressed during the embryological developmental process. The true explanation of how traits are genetically programmed is actually a deal more complex than that. But the point is made. There is no single, identifiable ‘gay’ gene.
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| Jun22-12, 11:59 AM | #11 |
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To be honest, your question made me doubt my knowledge about this topic.
AFAIK genes never determinate an attribute of a organism, their "data" just facilitate or inhibit a certain physical abilty of the organism (via biochemic factors), but being homosexual is something psycological. |
| Jun22-12, 05:21 PM | #12 |
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| Jun22-12, 06:10 PM | #13 |
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Yeah - the question amounts to whether sexual orientation is something you can "help being" or not. A genetic predisposition has been argued to put it in the "not something to be cured" category. ie. we can change peoples sex but we don't think of this as "curing" their sex and we don't think of our sex as something we can help being.
We can easily see that it is not as strongly predetermined as, say, sex or eye-color; nor as weakly determined as, say, a preference for pink or having short hair. That preferences can be genetic is shown by the number of sexually selective characteristics in nature - where a genetic predisposition for, say, dramatic plumage in the male is paired with a preference for that plumage in the female. Here you have a psychological attitude, "stripey tails are sexy", being genetically determined. |
| Jun23-12, 03:54 AM | #14 |
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Yes Simon, unfortunately there is no escaping the undertone that this discussion always has. It is clear to me that even if it was ever proven that homosexuality has nothing whatever to do with genetic programming, that does not mean that it is something that anyone would want, or need, to be ‘cured’ of. To me, the suggestion that it is genetically programmed is actually the worst case. Another idea that I have encountered is that criminal behaviour is in the genes of those who commit crime. Nobody is going to suggest that criminal behaviour should be acceptable, indeed those who take this view want to use it to support the idea of permanently restricting the freedoms of such people. So the notion that homosexuality is something that you can’t help still leaves scope for it to be considered ‘bad’. If it is seen primarily as a lifestyle choice, then it is easier to support the idea that it is a choice that people should be free to make. For me, the prejudices against sexual orientation have nothing to do with the only question appropriate for consideration on this forum, which is whether or not it is genetically programmed because it serves an evolutionary purpose in terms of maximising replication of a given set of genes.
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| Jun23-12, 06:09 AM | #15 |
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Hmmm...just wondering: Let's assume there WAS a gay gene, how can someone be born with it while he/she was procreated by a non-homosexual man and a non-homosexual woman (in most cases)?
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| Jun23-12, 06:53 AM | #16 |
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There is another similar gene called ‘distalless’ because, before it was properly understood, certain alleles were known to cause distal elements to be absent in the fully developed organism. So one fascination of distalless is that it is a gene that is pretty universal across species – both humans and fruit flies have it for example. And certain alleles in fruit flies can cause then to be born without feelers of even legs. In humans it can cause serious malformations of a similar nature. Again, clearly one gene cannot govern the formation of an entire limb. The point is that distalless is critical in the triggering of the sequence that leads to the formation of a whole limb. So it is possible that a single gene could be identified that a certain allele of that gene could trigger a sequence in embryonic development that leads to homosexuality in the mature organism. But it is also entirely possible for some organisms to have that allele and not be affected by it. In the way that, not everyone in a family known to have the gene that causes breast cancer actually develops breast cancer. Not everyone in a family known to have the gene that causes sickle cell anaemia necessarily have sickle red blood cells. The question I once posed is whether it is possible, if homosexuality is genetically programmed, for it to be maintained by evolution at a certain proportion in the population. And the answer came that yes it is. The suggestion is that the prevalence of a certain trait in a population could affect the selective pressure that acts on it, such that, in the manner of a closed loop control system, it finds a balance at a certain proportion in the population. And that then raises the possibility that other factors could also act on the selective pressure such that the balance point changes, thus explaining why that proportion is different at different times. See what I mean about more subtle and more complex? |
| Jun23-12, 07:46 AM | #17 |
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You'll notice that homosexual behavior is exhibited in animals besides humans, and that it is by no means a dominant characteristic. Also - being homosexual is not a barrier to having children since you don't have to be exclusive to the same sex just because you self-identify a particular way. There is a rich variety of human sexual identification - beyond the black-and-white definitions that many people seem to want to saddle themselves with. |
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