LennoxPoodle wrote: »I think it's a great misconception that incest in general causes major problems IRL. Only prolonged (over multiple generations), concentrated and somewhat isolated incest causes really significant problems. If siblings occasionally produce offspring no problems are to be expected, aside from consequences stemming from the taboo. I guess our aversion for it (culturally expressed in fiction) mainly protects us from devastating large scale spread. As long as the influx of new genetic material is secured everything is fine biologically speaking.
robertbmilesb14_ESO wrote: »LennoxPoodle wrote: »I think it's a great misconception that incest in general causes major problems IRL. Only prolonged (over multiple generations), concentrated and somewhat isolated incest causes really significant problems. If siblings occasionally produce offspring no problems are to be expected, aside from consequences stemming from the taboo. I guess our aversion for it (culturally expressed in fiction) mainly protects us from devastating large scale spread. As long as the influx of new genetic material is secured everything is fine biologically speaking.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/animals-and-us/201210/the-problem-incest
A near 50% chance at birth defects is not a misconception.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23470695
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1504045/?page=1
etc.
LennoxPoodle wrote: »robertbmilesb14_ESO wrote: »LennoxPoodle wrote: »I think it's a great misconception that incest in general causes major problems IRL. Only prolonged (over multiple generations), concentrated and somewhat isolated incest causes really significant problems. If siblings occasionally produce offspring no problems are to be expected, aside from consequences stemming from the taboo. I guess our aversion for it (culturally expressed in fiction) mainly protects us from devastating large scale spread. As long as the influx of new genetic material is secured everything is fine biologically speaking.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/animals-and-us/201210/the-problem-incest
A near 50% chance at birth defects is not a misconception.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23470695
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1504045/?page=1
etc.
I stand corrected then, although the text assumes that the genome of siblings is 50% identical, which is only true in average (it can theoretically range from 0 to 100%). I'm curious for the reasons though. I know it increases the chance of hereditary genetic issues occurring, but that difference seems rather extreme (for first gen inbreeding).
VaranisArano wrote: »LennoxPoodle wrote: »robertbmilesb14_ESO wrote: »LennoxPoodle wrote: »I think it's a great misconception that incest in general causes major problems IRL. Only prolonged (over multiple generations), concentrated and somewhat isolated incest causes really significant problems. If siblings occasionally produce offspring no problems are to be expected, aside from consequences stemming from the taboo. I guess our aversion for it (culturally expressed in fiction) mainly protects us from devastating large scale spread. As long as the influx of new genetic material is secured everything is fine biologically speaking.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/animals-and-us/201210/the-problem-incest
A near 50% chance at birth defects is not a misconception.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23470695
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1504045/?page=1
etc.
I stand corrected then, although the text assumes that the genome of siblings is 50% identical, which is only true in average (it can theoretically range from 0 to 100%). I'm curious for the reasons though. I know it increases the chance of hereditary genetic issues occurring, but that difference seems rather extreme (for first gen inbreeding).
I apologize if you didnt want the biology lesson. Essentially, it amplifies the chance for one or more recessive genetic disorders if the parents are carriers of the recessive gene. Recessive genetic disorders arent the only issues incest can cause, but its the easiest to explain.
On average, siblings and parents share 50% of their genes (of the genes that actually vary in humans). That's a pretty good average, to be blunt, unless the parents have a lot of heterozygous traits (traits with one dominant and one recessive gene). The process of meiosis that gives half of each parent's DNA acts as a pretty good gene scrambler...but in the case of father/daughter incest, its like getting 3/4th of the potential DNA in the mix from the same person or in Brother/Sister, improves the chances for getting two copies of recessive or harmful genetic traits that their parents were carrying.
So an individual who's carrying a recessive gene doesn't have the disorder because they also have the dominant gene. If they have a child with another carrier (if you are a carrier, at least one parent is a carrier, and your sibling has a 50% chance to be a carrier) the chance of the child having double recessives is 25%. Now realize that there are numerous recessive disorders and that on average, Humans carry one to two lethal recessives, and you start to see why that 25% chance of getting at least one double recessive that causes problems of varying severity is actually pretty high in the case of sibling incest.
So the biggest problem for brother-sister incest is that if someone has got any recessive genes in their family that could cause issues, having a child with a sibling is just using the DNA of two people who each have at least a 50% chance of being a carrier for any given recessive.
You'd see a very similar problem for any two parents who know they are carriers for a recessive gene - such as if there's a known incidence of the disorder in their family history. However, in thise cases there is not a significant genetic overlap so while there might be a high risk for a particular genetic disorder, its not the same risk as incest where you have multiple chances to double any recessives the sibling's parents had carried.
In the case of children of incest who don't have any problems, they essentially won the genetic lottery. They didn't get any harmful recessive doubling or other problems. At 50 to 60%, its not fair to say they are the exception or the rule. I'd say rather that they were pretty lucky, genetically.
So this explains why incest causes a higher incidence of recessive genetic disorders - there's a 50% chance that each sibling will be a carrier, and if they are, there's a 25% chance their child will get both recessives. These genetic disorders made up a portion of that 40-50% of problems seen in the studied children that were the result of incest.
Hope that helps clarify a bit!
lordrichter wrote: »Does any evidence exist that creatures on Nirn are DNA based?
LennoxPoodle wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »LennoxPoodle wrote: »robertbmilesb14_ESO wrote: »LennoxPoodle wrote: »I think it's a great misconception that incest in general causes major problems IRL. Only prolonged (over multiple generations), concentrated and somewhat isolated incest causes really significant problems. If siblings occasionally produce offspring no problems are to be expected, aside from consequences stemming from the taboo. I guess our aversion for it (culturally expressed in fiction) mainly protects us from devastating large scale spread. As long as the influx of new genetic material is secured everything is fine biologically speaking.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/animals-and-us/201210/the-problem-incest
A near 50% chance at birth defects is not a misconception.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23470695
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1504045/?page=1
etc.
I stand corrected then, although the text assumes that the genome of siblings is 50% identical, which is only true in average (it can theoretically range from 0 to 100%). I'm curious for the reasons though. I know it increases the chance of hereditary genetic issues occurring, but that difference seems rather extreme (for first gen inbreeding).
I apologize if you didnt want the biology lesson. Essentially, it amplifies the chance for one or more recessive genetic disorders if the parents are carriers of the recessive gene. Recessive genetic disorders arent the only issues incest can cause, but its the easiest to explain.
On average, siblings and parents share 50% of their genes (of the genes that actually vary in humans). That's a pretty good average, to be blunt, unless the parents have a lot of heterozygous traits (traits with one dominant and one recessive gene). The process of meiosis that gives half of each parent's DNA acts as a pretty good gene scrambler...but in the case of father/daughter incest, its like getting 3/4th of the potential DNA in the mix from the same person or in Brother/Sister, improves the chances for getting two copies of recessive or harmful genetic traits that their parents were carrying.
So an individual who's carrying a recessive gene doesn't have the disorder because they also have the dominant gene. If they have a child with another carrier (if you are a carrier, at least one parent is a carrier, and your sibling has a 50% chance to be a carrier) the chance of the child having double recessives is 25%. Now realize that there are numerous recessive disorders and that on average, Humans carry one to two lethal recessives, and you start to see why that 25% chance of getting at least one double recessive that causes problems of varying severity is actually pretty high in the case of sibling incest.
So the biggest problem for brother-sister incest is that if someone has got any recessive genes in their family that could cause issues, having a child with a sibling is just using the DNA of two people who each have at least a 50% chance of being a carrier for any given recessive.
You'd see a very similar problem for any two parents who know they are carriers for a recessive gene - such as if there's a known incidence of the disorder in their family history. However, in thise cases there is not a significant genetic overlap so while there might be a high risk for a particular genetic disorder, its not the same risk as incest where you have multiple chances to double any recessives the sibling's parents had carried.
In the case of children of incest who don't have any problems, they essentially won the genetic lottery. They didn't get any harmful recessive doubling or other problems. At 50 to 60%, its not fair to say they are the exception or the rule. I'd say rather that they were pretty lucky, genetically.
So this explains why incest causes a higher incidence of recessive genetic disorders - there's a 50% chance that each sibling will be a carrier, and if they are, there's a 25% chance their child will get both recessives. These genetic disorders made up a portion of that 40-50% of problems seen in the studied children that were the result of incest.
Hope that helps clarify a bit!
I really enjoy biology lessons!
What the problem is, was clear for me. I just wasn't aware of the huge amount of average proplematic recessives. I just estimated the chance for problems to go up a single digit percentage or something along those lines.
Let me check (a simplified version of) the math here quickly. To pass on a given harmfull chromosome the chance is 50%. So the chance for brother and sister to have it both is 25%. The chance for both to pass that on (asuming both have it) is again 25%, resulting in a total of 12.5% for a first generation inbred child. With 2 chromosomes (used as average here, A harmfull combination(double recessive), B harmless) we get: AA(12.5%^2=1/64)+AB(1/8*7/8=7/64)+BA(7/64)=15/64=23.4375%
That's far below 50 but still alarming. There must be something else at play.
lordrichter wrote: »Does any evidence exist that creatures on Nirn are DNA based?
Sicerius420 wrote: »how the *** did we get on this subject anyway