pleiotropy

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
17
Words With Friends
19
Letters
10
Pronunciation
/plaɪˈɒtɹəpi/
See all 2 pronunciations
/plaɪˈɒtɹəpi/ · /plaɪˈɑtɹəpi/

Definition of pleiotropy

2 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)The influence of a single gene on multiple phenotypic traits; pleiotropism.
    “This experimental design is analogous to the experiment that we performed to test whether antagonistic pleiotropy operates as a genetic mechanism in the evolution of late-life mortality rate plateaus.”
    “George C. Williams (1957) first developed the idea that pleiotropy might be an important determinant of senescence. Pleiotropy simply means that single genes have multiple effects. With regard to aging, Williams proposed that the same genes could have beneficial effects early in life but detrimental effects late in life. Because the effects are counteracting, the theory has been called "antagonistic pleiotropy."”
    “Much of the recent discussion of the extent of pleiotropy has been stimulated by the work of Gunter Wagner and colleagues (Wagner et al. 2008; Wagner & Zhang 2011), taking advantage of recent methodological advances to test a hypothesis of universal pleiotropy, whereby all traits are affected by each gene.”
    “I think what people are really asking when they talk about pleiotropy is this idea of genetic trade-offs. If you lower risk for schizophrenia, are you actually unknowingly increasing risk for another condition?”
See all 2 definitions

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)The influence of a single gene on multiple phenotypic traits; pleiotropism.
    “This experimental design is analogous to the experiment that we performed to test whether antagonistic pleiotropy operates as a genetic mechanism in the evolution of late-life mortality rate plateaus.”
    “George C. Williams (1957) first developed the idea that pleiotropy might be an important determinant of senescence. Pleiotropy simply means that single genes have multiple effects. With regard to aging, Williams proposed that the same genes could have beneficial effects early in life but detrimental effects late in life. Because the effects are counteracting, the theory has been called "antagonistic pleiotropy."”
    “Much of the recent discussion of the extent of pleiotropy has been stimulated by the work of Gunter Wagner and colleagues (Wagner et al. 2008; Wagner & Zhang 2011), taking advantage of recent methodological advances to test a hypothesis of universal pleiotropy, whereby all traits are affected by each gene.”
    “I think what people are really asking when they talk about pleiotropy is this idea of genetic trade-offs. If you lower risk for schizophrenia, are you actually unknowingly increasing risk for another condition?”
  2. (countable, uncountable)The existence of drug effects (especially beneficial effects) other than the one for which the drug was designed.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

Coined by German zoologist Ludwig Plate in 1910, from Ancient Greek πλείων (pleíōn) + -tropy; by surface analysis, pleio- + -tropy.

Anagrams of pleiotropy

1 play · some not in Scrabble

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200+ playable · top: LIPOTROPY (16 pts)

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