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Genome-Wide Analysis of Cold Adaptation in Indigenous Siberian Populations

Following the dispersal out of Africa, where hominins evolved in warm environments for millions of years, our species has colonised different climate zones of the world, including high latitudes and cold environments. The extent to which human habitation in (sub-)Arctic regions has been enabled by c...

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Autores principales: Cardona, Alexia, Pagani, Luca, Antao, Tiago, Lawson, Daniel J., Eichstaedt, Christina A., Yngvadottir, Bryndis, Shwe, Ma Than Than, Wee, Joseph, Romero, Irene Gallego, Raj, Srilakshmi, Metspalu, Mait, Villems, Richard, Willerslev, Eske, Tyler-Smith, Chris, Malyarchuk, Boris A., Derenko, Miroslava V., Kivisild, Toomas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4029955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24847810
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098076
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author Cardona, Alexia
Pagani, Luca
Antao, Tiago
Lawson, Daniel J.
Eichstaedt, Christina A.
Yngvadottir, Bryndis
Shwe, Ma Than Than
Wee, Joseph
Romero, Irene Gallego
Raj, Srilakshmi
Metspalu, Mait
Villems, Richard
Willerslev, Eske
Tyler-Smith, Chris
Malyarchuk, Boris A.
Derenko, Miroslava V.
Kivisild, Toomas
author_facet Cardona, Alexia
Pagani, Luca
Antao, Tiago
Lawson, Daniel J.
Eichstaedt, Christina A.
Yngvadottir, Bryndis
Shwe, Ma Than Than
Wee, Joseph
Romero, Irene Gallego
Raj, Srilakshmi
Metspalu, Mait
Villems, Richard
Willerslev, Eske
Tyler-Smith, Chris
Malyarchuk, Boris A.
Derenko, Miroslava V.
Kivisild, Toomas
author_sort Cardona, Alexia
collection PubMed
description Following the dispersal out of Africa, where hominins evolved in warm environments for millions of years, our species has colonised different climate zones of the world, including high latitudes and cold environments. The extent to which human habitation in (sub-)Arctic regions has been enabled by cultural buffering, short-term acclimatization and genetic adaptations is not clearly understood. Present day indigenous populations of Siberia show a number of phenotypic features, such as increased basal metabolic rate, low serum lipid levels and increased blood pressure that have been attributed to adaptation to the extreme cold climate. In this study we introduce a dataset of 200 individuals from ten indigenous Siberian populations that were genotyped for 730,525 SNPs across the genome to identify genes and non-coding regions that have undergone unusually rapid allele frequency and long-range haplotype homozygosity change in the recent past. At least three distinct population clusters could be identified among the Siberians, each of which showed a number of unique signals of selection. A region on chromosome 11 (chr11:66–69 Mb) contained the largest amount of clustering of significant signals and also the strongest signals in all the different selection tests performed. We present a list of candidate cold adaption genes that showed significant signals of positive selection with our strongest signals associated with genes involved in energy regulation and metabolism (CPT1A, LRP5, THADA) and vascular smooth muscle contraction (PRKG1). By employing a new method that paints phased chromosome chunks by their ancestry we distinguish local Siberian-specific long-range haplotype signals from those introduced by admixture.
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spelling pubmed-40299552014-05-28 Genome-Wide Analysis of Cold Adaptation in Indigenous Siberian Populations Cardona, Alexia Pagani, Luca Antao, Tiago Lawson, Daniel J. Eichstaedt, Christina A. Yngvadottir, Bryndis Shwe, Ma Than Than Wee, Joseph Romero, Irene Gallego Raj, Srilakshmi Metspalu, Mait Villems, Richard Willerslev, Eske Tyler-Smith, Chris Malyarchuk, Boris A. Derenko, Miroslava V. Kivisild, Toomas PLoS One Research Article Following the dispersal out of Africa, where hominins evolved in warm environments for millions of years, our species has colonised different climate zones of the world, including high latitudes and cold environments. The extent to which human habitation in (sub-)Arctic regions has been enabled by cultural buffering, short-term acclimatization and genetic adaptations is not clearly understood. Present day indigenous populations of Siberia show a number of phenotypic features, such as increased basal metabolic rate, low serum lipid levels and increased blood pressure that have been attributed to adaptation to the extreme cold climate. In this study we introduce a dataset of 200 individuals from ten indigenous Siberian populations that were genotyped for 730,525 SNPs across the genome to identify genes and non-coding regions that have undergone unusually rapid allele frequency and long-range haplotype homozygosity change in the recent past. At least three distinct population clusters could be identified among the Siberians, each of which showed a number of unique signals of selection. A region on chromosome 11 (chr11:66–69 Mb) contained the largest amount of clustering of significant signals and also the strongest signals in all the different selection tests performed. We present a list of candidate cold adaption genes that showed significant signals of positive selection with our strongest signals associated with genes involved in energy regulation and metabolism (CPT1A, LRP5, THADA) and vascular smooth muscle contraction (PRKG1). By employing a new method that paints phased chromosome chunks by their ancestry we distinguish local Siberian-specific long-range haplotype signals from those introduced by admixture. Public Library of Science 2014-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC4029955/ /pubmed/24847810 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098076 Text en © 2014 Cardona et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cardona, Alexia
Pagani, Luca
Antao, Tiago
Lawson, Daniel J.
Eichstaedt, Christina A.
Yngvadottir, Bryndis
Shwe, Ma Than Than
Wee, Joseph
Romero, Irene Gallego
Raj, Srilakshmi
Metspalu, Mait
Villems, Richard
Willerslev, Eske
Tyler-Smith, Chris
Malyarchuk, Boris A.
Derenko, Miroslava V.
Kivisild, Toomas
Genome-Wide Analysis of Cold Adaptation in Indigenous Siberian Populations
title Genome-Wide Analysis of Cold Adaptation in Indigenous Siberian Populations
title_full Genome-Wide Analysis of Cold Adaptation in Indigenous Siberian Populations
title_fullStr Genome-Wide Analysis of Cold Adaptation in Indigenous Siberian Populations
title_full_unstemmed Genome-Wide Analysis of Cold Adaptation in Indigenous Siberian Populations
title_short Genome-Wide Analysis of Cold Adaptation in Indigenous Siberian Populations
title_sort genome-wide analysis of cold adaptation in indigenous siberian populations
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4029955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24847810
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098076
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