Frontiers in Genetics (Dec 2018)

Associations Between Genetic Data and Quantitative Assessment of Normal Facial Asymmetry

  • Sara Rolfe,
  • Su-In Lee,
  • Su-In Lee,
  • Linda Shapiro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2018.00659
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Human facial asymmetry is due to a complex interaction of genetic and environmental factors. To identify genetic influences on facial asymmetry, we developed a method for automated scoring that summarizes local morphology features and their spatial distribution. A genome-wide association study using asymmetry scores from two local symmetry features was conducted and significant genetic associations were identified for one asymmetry feature, including genes thought to play a role in craniofacial disorders and development: NFATC1, SOX5, NBAS, and TCF7L1. These results provide evidence that normal variation in facial asymmetry may be impacted by common genetic variants and further motivate the development of automated summaries of complex phenotypes.

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