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When Genes Converge: Gene–Environment Interactions in Multiple Sclerosis
When Genes Converge: Gene–Environment Interactions in Multiple Sclerosis

This blog post examines Jacobs et al.’s UK Biobank study on gene–environment interactions in multiple sclerosis, focusing on how inherited genetic susceptibility may modify the effects of early-life environmental exposures. The article highlights the study’s key finding that childhood body size interacts with polygenic risk for multiple sclerosis, including genetic risk outside the major histocompatibility complex region. By integrating epidemiology, polygenic risk scoring, and environmental risk analysis, the post explains how childhood obesity, smoking, and pubertal timing relate to multiple sclerosis susceptibility and why these findings may inform future prevention strategies based on genetic risk stratification.

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