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Evidence of Polygenic Adaptation to High Altitude from Tibetan and Sherpa Genomes

Authors :
Marco Sazzini
Mingma G Sherpa
Donata Luiselli
Sara De Fanti
Marco Di Marcello
Stefania Sarno
Davide Peluzzi
Phurba T Sherpa
Davide Pettener
Giorgio Marinelli
Guido Alberto Gnecchi-Ruscone
Paolo Abondio
Luca Natali
Gnecchi-Ruscone, Guido A
Abondio, Paolo
De Fanti, Sara
Sarno, Stefania
Sherpa, Mingma G
Sherpa, Phurba T
Marinelli, Giorgio
Natali, Luca
Di Marcello, Marco
Peluzzi, Davide
Luiselli, Donata
Pettener, Davide
Sazzini, Marco
Source :
Genome Biology and Evolution
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2018.

Abstract

Although Tibetans and Sherpa present several physiological adjustments evolved to cope with selective pressures imposed by the high-altitude environment, especially hypobaric hypoxia, few selective sweeps at a limited number of hypoxia related genes were confirmed by multiple genomic studies. Nevertheless, variants at these loci were found to be associated only with downregulation of the erythropoietic cascade, which represents an indirect aspect of the considered adaptive phenotype. Accordingly, the genetic basis of Tibetan/Sherpa adaptive traits remains to be fully elucidated, in part due to limitations of selection scans implemented so far and mostly relying on the hard sweep model. In order to overcome this issue, we used whole-genome sequence data and several selection statistics as input for gene network analyses aimed at testing for the occurrence of polygenic adaptation in these high-altitude Himalayan populations. Being able to detect also subtle genomic signatures ascribable to weak positive selection at multiple genes of the same functional subnetwork, this approach allowed us to infer adaptive evolution at loci individually showing small effect sizes, but belonging to highly interconnected biological pathways overall involved in angiogenetic processes. Therefore, these findings pinpointed a series of selective events neglected so far, which likely contributed to the augmented tissue blood perfusion observed in Tibetans and Sherpa, thus uncovering the genetic determinants of a key biological mechanism that underlies their adaptation to high altitude.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17596653
Volume :
10
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Biology and Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a3ee73b3449f5d77054fd742e3253e2a