In a groundbreaking study poised to transform our understanding of genetic influence, researchers from the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) and the Norwegian Institute of Public Health have unveiled a novel analytical framework that disentangles the complex genetic interplay between parents and their offspring. Published in the prestigious journal Cell Genomics, this pioneering research reveals that the genes parents carry but do not necessarily pass on to their children still create environmental effects profoundly shaping traits such as height, body mass index (BMI), and academic performance.
The conventional focus of genetic studies has largely centered on an individual’s own DNA, attributing phenotypic variation to inherited alleles. However, this paradigm overlooks a critical factor: the genetic architecture of parents influences the environment they cultivate for their children, a principle termed “genetic nurture.” This environmental shaping by parental genotypes indirectly impacts offspring development, rendering simplistic genetic attributions misleading and incomplete.
Adding further complexity, the team addressed the phenomenon known as the parent-of-origin effect. Certain genes are epigenetically imprinted such that their expression depends exclusively on whether they are inherited maternally or paternally. This imprinting causes differential phenotypic outcomes from identical gene sequences, elucidating why some genetic disorders manifest distinctively contingent on the parent of transmission. These epigenetic nuances previously confounded efforts to partition genetic effects but are now integral to this new analytical model.
This innovative study leverages comprehensive genetic and phenotypic data derived from over 30,000 trios—comprising mother, father, and child—from two extensive biobank cohorts: the Norwegian Mother, Father, and Child Cohort and the Estonian Biobank. By analyzing measurable traits at a population scale, including height, BMI, and standardized educational test scores at age 10, the research delineates how much variation derives from the child’s own genome versus indirect genetic effects mediated by parental genomes and parent-specific transmission patterns.
Notably, the novel methodology incorporates statistical adjustments for assortative mating—that is, the tendency of individuals to select partners with similar phenotypic traits, such as height—which can otherwise bias genetic effect estimates. This level of modeling sophistication permits a more precise parsing of the distinct genetic and environmental contributions shaping human traits.
The results are revelatory: while a child’s own DNA undeniably exerts the strongest direct influence for all traits examined, indirect parental effects and parent-of-origin influences account for a comparably substantial fraction of the total genetic variance. This finding challenges the reductionist view that genetic traits are solely direct consequences of inherited alleles and establishes that inherited environments sculpted by parental genotypes wield immense power.
Remarkably, the loci responsible for direct and indirect genetic effects substantially overlap, implying that these genetic regions orchestrate phenotypic expression both through intrinsic genetic inheritance and through environmental contingencies established by parental genotypes. This dual-mode of genetic influence marks a paradigm shift, positing a shared genetic architecture underlying both gene-driven and environment-mediated trait variation.
The study’s insights extend to profound molecular mechanisms governing human development and disease susceptibility. In traits such as BMI and educational attainment, environmental influences predominate, underscoring the importance of family and caregiving environments. Consequently, public health and educational interventions must recognize the intertwined roles of genetics and environment, particularly the concealed impact of parental genotypes on offspring outcomes.
Importantly, the framework elucidated by this research holds promise for driving forward personalized medicine. By distinguishing genetic effects specific to parental alleles from those intrinsic to the individual, it aligns future therapeutic targeting with loci most amenable to direct intervention. Genes exerting indirect environmental effects or subject to imprinting may represent less tractable targets but are crucial for understanding disease etiology holistically.
From an epigenetic perspective, the observation that genetic imprinting may be more widespread than previously appreciated opens intriguing avenues for molecular genetics. The mechanisms that selectively silence alleles depending on parental origin remain incompletely elucidated, and these findings compel renewed investigation into the regulatory circuitry that governs imprinting and its developmental consequences.
This profound nexus of direct, indirect, and parent-specific genetic mechanisms commands a reevaluation of classical genetics. By precisely quantifying how parental genetics shapes offspring traits beyond mere allele transmission, the study unravels layers of complexity that enhance our interpretative models for heredity, evolution, and epidemiology.
Ultimately, this research not only illuminates the nuanced dynamics of genetic influence across generations but also establishes a versatile statistical and conceptual toolkit. This toolkit can be applied to myriad phenotypes and diseases, transcending simplistic genetic determinism and enriching the tapestry of human biology with the subtle interplay between inheritance and environment.
The ramifications for genetic research are expansive: from refining genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to improving risk prediction models, to guiding ethical considerations about genetic influence in family and societal contexts. As science advances, such integrative approaches herald a new era of genomics where the interplay between DNA and environment is elucidated with unprecedented clarity and precision.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Separating direct, indirect and parent-of-origin genetic effects in the human population
News Publication Date: 9-Jun-2026
Web References:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xgen.2026.101277
References:
Robinson, M., Krätschmer, I., Havdahl, A.K., et al. (2026). Separating direct, indirect and parent-of-origin genetic effects in the human population. Cell Genomics, 9 June 2026. DOI: 10.1016/j.xgen.2026.101277.
Image Credits: © ISTA
Keywords
Genetics, Genetic Nurture, Parent-of-Origin Effect, Imprinting, Epigenetics, Human Genetics, Heredity, Body Mass Index, Education, Phenotypic Variation, Genome Analysis, Molecular Genetics

