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High prevalence of chitotriosidase deficiency in Peruvian Amerindians exposed to chitin-bearing food and enteroparasites

The human genome encodes a gene for an enzymatically active chitinase (CHIT1) located in a single copy on Chromosome 1, which is highly expressed by activated macrophages and in other cells of the innate immune response. Several dysfunctional mutations are known in CHIT1, including a 24-bp duplicati...

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Autores principales: Manno, N., Sherratt, S., Boaretto, F., Coico, F. Mejìa, Camus, C. Espinoza, Campos, C. Jara, Musumeci, S., Battisti, A., Quinnell, R.J., León, J. Mostacero, Vazza, G., Mostacciuolo, M.L., Paoletti, M.G., Falcone, F.H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Applied Science Publishers 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4194353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25256524
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carbpol.2014.07.011
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author Manno, N.
Sherratt, S.
Boaretto, F.
Coico, F. Mejìa
Camus, C. Espinoza
Campos, C. Jara
Musumeci, S.
Battisti, A.
Quinnell, R.J.
León, J. Mostacero
Vazza, G.
Mostacciuolo, M.L.
Paoletti, M.G.
Falcone, F.H.
author_facet Manno, N.
Sherratt, S.
Boaretto, F.
Coico, F. Mejìa
Camus, C. Espinoza
Campos, C. Jara
Musumeci, S.
Battisti, A.
Quinnell, R.J.
León, J. Mostacero
Vazza, G.
Mostacciuolo, M.L.
Paoletti, M.G.
Falcone, F.H.
author_sort Manno, N.
collection PubMed
description The human genome encodes a gene for an enzymatically active chitinase (CHIT1) located in a single copy on Chromosome 1, which is highly expressed by activated macrophages and in other cells of the innate immune response. Several dysfunctional mutations are known in CHIT1, including a 24-bp duplication in Exon 10 causing catalytic deficiency. This duplication is a common variant conserved in many human populations, except in West and South Africans. Thus it has been proposed that human migration out of Africa and the consequent reduction of exposure to chitin from environmental factors may have enabled the conservation of dysfunctional mutations in human chitinases. Our data obtained from 85 indigenous Amerindians from Peru, representative of populations characterized by high prevalence of chitin-bearing enteroparasites and intense entomophagy, reveal a very high frequency of the 24-bp duplication (47.06%), and of other single nucleotide polymorphisms which are known to partially affect enzymatic activity (G102S: 42.7% and A442G/V: 25.5%). Our finding is in line with a founder effect, but appears to confute our previous hypothesis of a protective role against parasite infection and sustains the discussion on the redundancy of chitinolytic function.
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spelling pubmed-41943532014-11-26 High prevalence of chitotriosidase deficiency in Peruvian Amerindians exposed to chitin-bearing food and enteroparasites Manno, N. Sherratt, S. Boaretto, F. Coico, F. Mejìa Camus, C. Espinoza Campos, C. Jara Musumeci, S. Battisti, A. Quinnell, R.J. León, J. Mostacero Vazza, G. Mostacciuolo, M.L. Paoletti, M.G. Falcone, F.H. Carbohydr Polym Article The human genome encodes a gene for an enzymatically active chitinase (CHIT1) located in a single copy on Chromosome 1, which is highly expressed by activated macrophages and in other cells of the innate immune response. Several dysfunctional mutations are known in CHIT1, including a 24-bp duplication in Exon 10 causing catalytic deficiency. This duplication is a common variant conserved in many human populations, except in West and South Africans. Thus it has been proposed that human migration out of Africa and the consequent reduction of exposure to chitin from environmental factors may have enabled the conservation of dysfunctional mutations in human chitinases. Our data obtained from 85 indigenous Amerindians from Peru, representative of populations characterized by high prevalence of chitin-bearing enteroparasites and intense entomophagy, reveal a very high frequency of the 24-bp duplication (47.06%), and of other single nucleotide polymorphisms which are known to partially affect enzymatic activity (G102S: 42.7% and A442G/V: 25.5%). Our finding is in line with a founder effect, but appears to confute our previous hypothesis of a protective role against parasite infection and sustains the discussion on the redundancy of chitinolytic function. Elsevier Applied Science Publishers 2014-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4194353/ /pubmed/25256524 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carbpol.2014.07.011 Text en © 2014 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) .
spellingShingle Article
Manno, N.
Sherratt, S.
Boaretto, F.
Coico, F. Mejìa
Camus, C. Espinoza
Campos, C. Jara
Musumeci, S.
Battisti, A.
Quinnell, R.J.
León, J. Mostacero
Vazza, G.
Mostacciuolo, M.L.
Paoletti, M.G.
Falcone, F.H.
High prevalence of chitotriosidase deficiency in Peruvian Amerindians exposed to chitin-bearing food and enteroparasites
title High prevalence of chitotriosidase deficiency in Peruvian Amerindians exposed to chitin-bearing food and enteroparasites
title_full High prevalence of chitotriosidase deficiency in Peruvian Amerindians exposed to chitin-bearing food and enteroparasites
title_fullStr High prevalence of chitotriosidase deficiency in Peruvian Amerindians exposed to chitin-bearing food and enteroparasites
title_full_unstemmed High prevalence of chitotriosidase deficiency in Peruvian Amerindians exposed to chitin-bearing food and enteroparasites
title_short High prevalence of chitotriosidase deficiency in Peruvian Amerindians exposed to chitin-bearing food and enteroparasites
title_sort high prevalence of chitotriosidase deficiency in peruvian amerindians exposed to chitin-bearing food and enteroparasites
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4194353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25256524
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carbpol.2014.07.011
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