Pleiotropy vs. Polygenic Inheritance: Key Genetic Distinctions Explained

Pleiotropy is when one gene influences multiple, seemingly unrelated traits—like Marfan syndrome’s tall stature and heart defects. Polygenic inheritance is when many genes each add a small effect to create one trait—think human height or skin color.

People mix them up because both involve genes and multiple outcomes. Textbooks often lump “multi-gene effects” together, so students read “many genes” and assume it’s the same as “many effects from one gene.”

Key Differences

Pleiotropy: one gene → many traits; often shows Mendelian ratios. Polygenic: many genes → one trait; shows bell-curve distribution. Mutations in pleiotropic genes can cause syndromes, whereas polygenic traits shift gradually across populations without single-gene disorders.

Examples and Daily Life

Marfan syndrome (pleiotropy) gives long limbs and lens dislocation. Height (polygenic) needs hundreds of loci; you and your sibling differ because each parent chips in a unique mix of those loci, not one master switch.

Can a trait be both pleiotropic and polygenic?

Yes. Height is polygenic, yet some pleiotropic genes (e.g., FBN1) can also influence it alongside other traits.

Which is easier to edit with CRISPR?

Pleiotropic targets—one gene change can fix multiple issues—whereas polygenic traits need edits at many loci, raising complexity and ethical concerns.

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