In newborns, severe congenital heart defects are rarer than mild ones. This epidemiological relationship between heart defect severity and incidence lacks explanation. Here, an analysis of ~10,000 mice from two inbred strain crosses illustrates the fundamental role of epistasis. Modifier genes raise or lower the risk of specific defects via pairwise (G×G) and higher-order (G×G×G) interactions with . Their effect sizes correlate with the severity of a defect. The risk loci for mild, atrial septal defects exert predominantly small G×G effects, while the loci for severe, atrioventricular septal defects exert large G×G and G×G×G effects. The loci for moderately severe ventricular septal defects have intermediate effects. Interestingly, G×G×G effects are three times more likely to suppress risk when the genotypes at the first two loci are from the same rather than different parental inbred strains. This suggests the genetic coadaptation of interacting G×G×G loci, a phenomenon that Dobzhansky first described in . Thus, epistasis plays dual roles in the pathogenesis of congenital heart disease and the robustness of cardiac development. The empirical results suggest a relationship between the fitness cost and genetic architecture of a disease phenotype and a means for phenotypic robustness to have evolved.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8467714PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes12091368DOI Listing

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