1. Positive selection in Europeans and East-Asians at the ABCA12 gene
- Author
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Dario Antonini, Roberto Sirica, Ombretta Guardiola, Lucia Sticco, Giovanni D'Angelo, Heerman Kumar, Caterina Missero, Chris Tyler-Smith, Qasim Ayub, Yali Xue, Valeria Petrella, Gennaro Andolfi, Marco Salvemini, Donatella Tramontano, Vincenza Colonna, Marianna Buonaiuto, Sirica, R., Buonaiuto, M., Petrella, V., Sticco, L., Tramontano, D., Antonini, D., Missero, C., Guardiola, O., Andolfi, G., Kumar, H., Ayub, Q., Xue, Y., Tyler-Smith, C., Salvemini, M., D'Angelo, G., and Colonna, V.
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,lcsh:Medicine ,Gene Expression ,Genomics ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,DNA sequencing ,Article ,White People ,ABCA12 gene ,03 medical and health sciences ,Exon ,0302 clinical medicine ,Asian People ,Gene Frequency ,Transcription (biology) ,Gene expression ,Humans ,Allele ,Selection, Genetic ,lcsh:Science ,Gene ,Alleles ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Natural selection ,lcsh:R ,Intron ,030104 developmental biology ,Haplotypes ,lcsh:Q ,ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Natural selection acts on genetic variants by increasing the frequency of alleles responsible for a cellular function that is favorable in a certain environment. In a previous genome-wide scan for positive selection in contemporary humans, we identified a signal of positive selection in European and Asians at the genetic variant rs10180970. The variant is located in the second intron of the ABCA12 gene, which is implicated in the lipid barrier formation and down-regulated by UVB radiation. We studied the signal of selection in the genomic region surrounding rs10180970 in a larger dataset that includes DNA sequences from ancient samples. We also investigated the functional consequences of gene expression of the alleles of rs10180970 and another genetic variant in its proximity in healthy volunteers exposed to similar UV radiation.We confirmed the selection signal and refine its location that extends over 35 kb and includes the first intron, the first two exons and the transcription starting site of ABCA12. We found no obvious effect of rs10180970 alleles on ABCA12 gene expression. We reconstructed the trajectory of the T allele over the last 80,000 years to discover that it was specific to H. sapiens and frequent among non-Africans already 45,000 years ago.
- Published
- 2019