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Scientists discover genetic underpinnings of bisexuality
Latest News
January 3, 2024

Scientists discover genetic underpinnings of bisexuality

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP)— For the first time, scientists have identified genetic variations associated with human bisexual behaviour — and found these markers are linked to risk-taking and having more offspring when they are carried by heterosexual men.

Jianzhi “George” Zhang, a professor at the University of Michigan and senior author of the new research, told AFP it helped answer the long-standing evolutionary puzzle of why natural selection has not eliminated the genetics underpinning attraction within the same sex.

The study, published Wednesday in Science Advances, was based on data from more than 450,000 people of European descent who signed up for the UK Biobank, a long-term genomics project that has proven a major boon for health research.

It builds on growing research including a seminal 2019 paper in Science that found genetic variants influenced to some extent whether a person engaged in same-sex behaviour, though environmental factors were more important.

“We realised that in the past, people lumped together all homosexual behaviour…but actually there’s a spectrum,” Zhang said, explaining part of the motivation for the new work.

By studying participants’ complete sets of DNA, or genomes, and combining that information with survey responses, Zhang and his co-author Siliang Song were able to confirm the signatures associated with same-sex behaviour and bisexual behaviour were in fact distinct.

This meant they could be analysed separately — which in turn revealed that male heterosexuals carrying the markers, which they called bisexual behaviour (BSB)-associated alleles, father more children than average and thus carry those genes forward.

What’s more, men who describe themselves as risk-takers tended to have more children and were more likely to carry BSB-associated alleles.

“Our results suggest that male BSB–associated alleles are likely reproductively advantageous, which may explain their past persistence and predict their future maintenance,” the authors wrote.

Although the UK Biobank’s survey simply asked respondents whether they considered themselves risk-takers or not, it is likely risk-taking behavior involves more unprotected sex and more partners.

“Nature is complicated,” said Zhang, reflecting on the fact that a single gene can influence multiple traits — a phenomenon known as “pleiotropy.”

“Here we’re talking about three traits: number of children, risk taking, and bisexual behaviour: they all share some genetic underpinnings.”

On the other hand, exclusive same-sex behaviour (eSSB) associated alleles were correlated with having fewer children when carried by heterosexual men — suggesting that over time these traits will fade away.

However, the UK Biobank data also revealed the proportion of people reporting both bisexual and homosexual behaviour has been rising for decades, which is probably due to growing societal openness.

The authors estimated, for instance, that whether a person is bisexual or not in their behaviour is 40 per cent influenced by genetics, and 60 per cent by the environment.

“We want to make it clear that our results predominantly contribute to the diversity, richness, and better understanding of human sexuality,” they stressed. “They are not, in any way, intended to suggest or endorse discrimination on the basis of sexual behaviour.”

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