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DNA dirty tricks loom in future elections

Take a covert saliva sample, run a whole-genome scan and a candidate's genetic quirks could come under unfair and misleading scrutiny

The genetic make-up of a candidate in the next US presidential election could be exploited by an opponent to raise doubts about their health or personality. So say medical researcher and medical lawyer , both at Boston University.

Anyone who wants a sample of a candidate鈥檚 DNA could probably get it from coffee cups or cutlery that the person has used, or perhaps even handshakes. Combine that with the fact that a well-funded campaign could now afford to pay for a whole-genome scan, and the divulging of a candidate鈥檚 genome becomes a genuine possibility, Green and Annas write in The New England Journal of Medicine ().

Such an act is more likely to aid demagoguery than make reliable predictions, though: at present, little is known about the genetic roots of personality, while most genes associated with a disease only slightly bump up the risk of developing the condition.

鈥淵ou could say truthfully that candidate A is at elevated risk for disease X, but that might increase his or her risk from 6 per cent to 6.5 per cent,鈥 says Green. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not really very meaningful.鈥

Unscrupulous opponents could nevertheless try to exploit the idea that the candidate鈥檚 鈥渂ad genes鈥 make him or her a poor choice, however misleading such a statement might be to those who don鈥檛 understand such details.

, a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School in Boston, sees one possible benefit to set against such dangers. A dust-up over a presidential candidate鈥檚 genes could motivate the general public to learn more about genetics, he says.

Journal reference: ,

Topics: Genetics