New Research In
Physical Sciences
Social Sciences
Featured Portals
Articles by Topic
Biological Sciences
Featured Portals
Articles by Topic
- Agricultural Sciences
- Anthropology
- Applied Biological Sciences
- Biochemistry
- Biophysics and Computational Biology
- Cell Biology
- Developmental Biology
- Ecology
- Environmental Sciences
- Evolution
- Genetics
- Immunology and Inflammation
- Medical Sciences
- Microbiology
- Neuroscience
- Pharmacology
- Physiology
- Plant Biology
- Population Biology
- Psychological and Cognitive Sciences
- Sustainability Science
- Systems Biology
The mystery of missing heritability: Genetic interactions create phantom heritability
Contributed by Eric S. Lander, December 5, 2011 (sent for review October 9, 2011)

Abstract
Human genetics has been haunted by the mystery of “missing heritability” of common traits. Although studies have discovered >1,200 variants associated with common diseases and traits, these variants typically appear to explain only a minority of the heritability. The proportion of heritability explained by a set of variants is the ratio of (i) the heritability due to these variants (numerator), estimated directly from their observed effects, to (ii) the total heritability (denominator), inferred indirectly from population data. The prevailing view has been that the explanation for missing heritability lies in the numerator—that is, in as-yet undiscovered variants. While many variants surely remain to be found, we show here that a substantial portion of missing heritability could arise from overestimation of the denominator, creating “phantom heritability.” Specifically, (i) estimates of total heritability implicitly assume the trait involves no genetic interactions (epistasis) among loci; (ii) this assumption is not justified, because models with interactions are also consistent with observable data; and (iii) under such models, the total heritability may be much smaller and thus the proportion of heritability explained much larger. For example, 80% of the currently missing heritability for Crohn's disease could be due to genetic interactions, if the disease involves interaction among three pathways. In short, missing heritability need not directly correspond to missing variants, because current estimates of total heritability may be significantly inflated by genetic interactions. Finally, we describe a method for estimating heritability from isolated populations that is not inflated by genetic interactions.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: lander{at}broadinstitute.org.
Author contributions: O.Z. and E.S.L. designed research; O.Z., E.H., S.R.S., and E.S.L. performed research; O.Z., E.H., S.R.S., and E.S.L. analyzed data; and O.Z. and E.S.L. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1119675109/-/DCSupplemental.
Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.
Citation Manager Formats
More Articles of This Classification
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Physical Sciences
Related Content
- No related articles found.
Cited by...
- Prevention and Control of Hypertension: JACC Health Promotion Series
- Systematic analysis of complex genetic interactions
- Quantitative analysis of population-scale family trees with millions of relatives
- The UMOD Locus: Insights into the Pathogenesis and Prognosis of Kidney Disease
- Replication and discovery of musculoskeletal QTLs in LG/J and SM/J advanced intercross lines
- Proteomics and metabolomics in ageing research: from biomarkers to systems biology
- TheCellMap.org: A Web-Accessible Database for Visualizing and Mining the Global Yeast Genetic Interaction Network
- Linking Genetics to Structural Biology: Complex Heterozygosity Screening with Actin Alanine Scan Alleles Identifies Functionally Related Surfaces on Yeast Actin
- Genome-Enabled Estimates of Additive and Nonadditive Genetic Variances and Prediction of Apple Phenotypes Across Environments
- Conflation of Short Identity-by-Descent Segments Bias Their Inferred Length Distribution
- Exhaustive Genome-Wide Search for SNP-SNP Interactions Across 10 Human Diseases
- Efficient Software for Multi-marker, Region-Based Analysis of GWAS Data
- Marker-Based Estimates Reveal Significant Nonadditive Effects in Clonally Propagated Cassava (Manihot esculenta): Implications for the Prediction of Total Genetic Value and the Selection of Varieties
- iSeq: A New Double-Barcode Method for Detecting Dynamic Genetic Interactions in Yeast
- A global genetic interaction network maps a wiring diagram of cellular function
- Multikernel linear mixed models for complex phenotype prediction
- The effect of gene interactions on the long-term response to selection
- Synthetic Genetic Arrays: Automation of Yeast Genetics
- A Novel Test for Detecting SNP-SNP Interactions in Case-Only Trio Studies
- The Heritability of Breast Cancer among Women in the Nordic Twin Study of Cancer
- Misspecification in Mixed-Model-Based Association Analysis
- Progress and promise in understanding the genetic basis of common diseases
- The Nature of Genetic Variation for Complex Traits Revealed by GWAS and Regional Heritability Mapping Analyses
- An Epistatic Interaction between Themis1 and Vav1 Modulates Regulatory T Cell Function and Inflammatory Bowel Disease Development
- The mathematical limits of genetic prediction for complex chronic disease
- Genetic Modifiers and Oligogenic Inheritance
- Contrasting genetic architectures in different mouse reference populations used for studying complex traits
- Genetic and Molecular Aspects of Hypertension
- Massively expedited genome-wide heritability analysis (MEGHA)
- Marker-Based Estimation of Heritability in Immortal Populations
- Comparison of Heritability of Cystatin C- and Creatinine-Based Estimates of Kidney Function and Their Relation to Heritability of Cardiovascular Disease
- Dissecting Genetic Architecture Underlying Seed Traits in Multiple Environments
- A map of directional genetic interactions in a metazoan cell
- Measuring missing heritability: Inferring the contribution of common variants
- Estimation of Epistatic Variance Components and Heritability in Founder Populations and Crosses
- Unraveling Additive from Nonadditive Effects Using Genomic Relationship Matrices
- Opposite risk patterns for autism and schizophrenia are associated with normal variation in birth size: phenotypic support for hypothesized diametric gene-dosage effects
- Rare and low-frequency variants in human common diseases and other complex traits
- The Heritability of Prostate Cancer in the Nordic Twin Study of Cancer
- Yeast Systems Biology: Our Best Shot at Modeling a Cell
- Multiple Associated Variants Increase the Heritability Explained for Plasma Lipids and Coronary Artery Disease
- Influence of Gene Interaction on Complex Trait Variation with Multilocus Models
- Enhanced killing of antibiotic-resistant bacteria enabled by massively parallel combinatorial genetics
- Rare coding variation in paraoxonase-1 is associated with ischemic stroke in the NHLBI Exome Sequencing Project
- Interactions between chromosomal and nonchromosomal elements reveal missing heritability
- What ethical and legal principles should guide the genotyping of children as part of a personalised screening programme for common cancer?
- Additive, Epistatic, and Environmental Effects Through the Lens of Expression Variability QTL in a Twin Cohort
- Searching for missing heritability: Designing rare variant association studies
- Genes-Environment Interactions in Obesity- and Diabetes-Associated Pancreatic Cancer: A GWAS Data Analysis
- Genetic interactions affecting human gene expression identified by variance association mapping
- Applications of Population Genetics to Animal Breeding, from Wright, Fisher and Lush to Genomic Prediction
- Identifying multiple causative genes at a single GWAS locus
- Republished: Non-heritable genetics of human disease: spotlight on post-zygotic genetic variation acquired during lifetime
- Molecular genetics and subjective well-being
- Improving the Accuracy and Efficiency of Identity-by-Descent Detection in Population Data
- Identity by Descent: Variation in Meiosis, Across Genomes, and in Populations
- Genomics in Cardiovascular Disease
- Novel gene-by-environment interactions: APOB and NPC1L1 variants affect the relationship between dietary and total plasma cholesterol
- Circulation Research Thematic Synopsis: Cardiovascular Genetics
- Analysis of natural variation reveals neurogenetic networks for Drosophila olfactory behavior
- DRD4 Genotype Predicts Longevity in Mouse and Human
- The Switch from Fetal to Adult Hemoglobin
- A negative genetic interaction map in isogenic cancer cell lines reveals cancer cell vulnerabilities
- Non-heritable genetics of human disease: spotlight on post-zygotic genetic variation acquired during lifetime
- More Than the Sum of Its Parts: A Complex Epistatic Network Underlies Natural Variation in Thermal Preference Behavior in Caenorhabditis elegans
- Ultrafast genome-wide scan for SNP-SNP interactions in common complex disease
- Epistasis dominates the genetic architecture of Drosophila quantitative traits
- Personalized Medicine: Temper Expectations--Response
- "Good Enough Solutions" and the Genetics of Complex Diseases
- High-Resolution Association Mapping of Atherosclerosis Loci in Mice
- The Emerging Paradigm of Network Medicine in the Study of Human Disease
- Circulation Research Thematic Synopsis: Cardiovascular Genetics
- Heritability lost; intelligence found: Intelligence is integral to the adaptation and survival of all organisms faced with changing environments
- Understanding cardiovascular disease: a journey through the genome (and what we found there)
- Molecular Mechanisms of Experimental Salt-Sensitive Hypertension
- Response to Comments on "The Predictive Capacity of Personal Genome Sequencing"
- Comment on "The Predictive Capacity of Personal Genome Sequencing"
- The genetic architecture of economic and political preferences
- The Predictive Capacity of Personal Genome Sequencing
- Report of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Working Group on Epigenetics and Hypertension














