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Paternally Derived Twinning: A Two Century Examination of Records of One Scottish Name

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2012

John B. St Clair*
Affiliation:
Speculative Society of Edinburgh, United Kingdom. john.stclair@scotland.gov.uk
Mikhail D. Golubovsky
Affiliation:
Department of Evolutionary Theory, Institute of the History of Science and Technology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia.
*
*Address for Correspondence: John B St Clair, 35 Lismore Crescent, Edinburgh EH8 7DL United Kingdom.

Abstract

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Paternal influence on twinning was investigated through a study of all the state and church records of Scotland for the period 1800–2000 (nine generations) in relation to one Scottish patronymic — in total 50,000 births. All recorded twins born with the chosen patronymic were identified and their whole paternal ascent and descent on the male line were charted for twins. There were established three pedigrees A, B and C manifesting clear paternal twinning hereditary transmission. Detailed familial reproduction patterns were traced for pedigree A, including phenotypic identification of twin zygosity in relation to seven same sexed pairs of twins in the pedigree and one same sexed pair out of dizygotic triplets. It is the most comprehensive description to date of such a kind of twin familial trait. The data presented show (i) the unique feature of clear direct paternal influence on twinning in three families; (ii) paternal factor(s) determination in both DZ and MZ twinning; and (iii) a definite association of twinning tendency with a partial male infertility, which corresponds to the prediction of the Infertility/Twinning Paternally Dependent syndrome hypothesis. The hypothesis of a founder effect explaining the similarity of A, B, C families and the possible localisation of the paternally dependent twinning factor on the Y-chromosome are currently under molecular investigation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2002