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Encyclopedia of EpidemiologyPub. date: 2008 | Online Pub. Date: November 27, 2007 | DOI: 10.4135/9781412953948 | Print ISBN: 9781412928168 | Online ISBN: 9781412953948| Publisher:SAGE Publications, Inc.
About this encyclopediaGene-Environment Interaction
F. John Meaney & Sydney Pettygrove
In the field of epidemiology, there has been increasing interest in documenting the results of interaction between specific genes or genotypes and well-understood environmental exposures. Gene-environment interactions are situations in which the combination of an environmental factor, such as exposure to cigarette smoking, with a genetic factor, such as a diseasepredisposing mutation, results in a greater risk or severity of the disease in question than either the genetic or environmental factor acting alone. These interactions have been studied in plants and animals for many years. While they have been hypothesized also to occur in humans, they have been documented in humans only fairly recently. In recent years, many examples of gene-environment interaction have been reported in the literature. There is now increasing acceptance of the idea that it is likely that all human disease is the result of the interaction between the genetic susceptibility to disease and environmental exposures during ...
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