Chat with us, powered by LiveChat Take a look at Extended Data Figure 3 from Huerta-Sánchez et al (2014). How does this figure emphasize that the Tibetan allele for EPAS1 came from Denisovans? (10 points) 2. Yo - EssayAbode

Take a look at Extended Data Figure 3 from Huerta-Sánchez et al (2014). How does this figure emphasize that the Tibetan allele for EPAS1 came from Denisovans? (10 points) 2. Yo

1. Take a look at Extended Data Figure 3 from Huerta-Sánchez et al (2014). How does this figure emphasize that the Tibetan allele for EPAS1 came from Denisovans? (10 points)

2. You are given the following seven aligned sequences from a single population (variants with respect to the first sequence are shown in bold). Justify whether or not you see any evidence of selection. (20 points)

TGGAGTGTGACCATAGCGAT
TGGAGTTTGACCATAGCCAT
TGGAGTGTGACCATAACCAT
TGGTGTTTGCCCATAACGAT
TGGTGTGTGACCATAGCGAT
TGGTGTGTGCCCATAGCGAT
TGGAGTGTGACCATAACGAT 

3. Explain the concept of the "Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution" and how it relates to the idea of a molecular clock? (10 points)

Natural selection on EPAS1 (HIF2α) associated with low hemoglobin concentration in Tibetan highlanders Cynthia M. Bealla,1, Gianpiero L. Cavallerib,1, Libin Dengc,2, Robert C. Elstond, Yang Gaoc, Jo Knighte,f, Chaohua Lic, Jiang Chuan Lig, Yu Liangh, Mark McCormackb, Hugh E. Montgomeryi,1, Hao Panc, Peter A. Robbinsj,1,3, Kevin V. Shiannak, Siu Cheung Taml, Ngodrop Tseringm, Krishna R. Veeramahn, Wei Wangh, Puchung Wangduim, Michael E. Wealee,1, Yaomin Xuo, Zhe Xuc, Ling Yangh, M. Justin Zamanp, Changqing Zengc,1,3, Li Zhango,1, Xianglong Zhangc, Pingcuo Zhaxih,1,4, and Yong Tang Zhengq

aDepartment of Anthropology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106-7125; bMolecular and Cellular Therapeutics, The Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Education and Research Centre, Beaumont Hospital, Dublin 9, Ireland; cBeijing Institute of Genomics, Key Laboratory of Genome Sciences and Information, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, China; dDepartment of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106-7281; eDepartment of Medical and Molecular Genetics, King’s College London, Guy’s Hospital, London SE1 9RT, United Kingdom; fNational Institute for Health Research, Biomedical Research Centre, Guy’s and St. Thomas’ National Health Service Foundation Trust and King’s College London, London SE1 7EH, United Kingdom; gYunnan Institute of Population and Family Planning Research, Kunming 650021, China; hBeijing Genomics Institute at Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518000, China; IInstitute for Human Health and Performance, University College London, London N19 5LW, United Kingdom; jDepartment of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PT, United Kingdom; kInstitute for Genome Sciences and Policy, Center for Human Genome Variation, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708; lSchool of Biomedical Sciences, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin NT, Hong Kong, China; mTibet Academy of Social Sciences, Lhasa 850000, Tibet Autonomous Region, China; nDepartment of History, The Centre for Society and Genetics and the Novembre Laboratory, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095-7221; oDepartment of Quantitative Health Sciences, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH 44195; pDepartment of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom; and qKunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming 650223, China

Edited by Peter T. Ellison, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, and approved May 17, 2010 (received for review February 26, 2010)

By impairing both function and survival, the severe reduction in oxygen availability associated with high-altitude environments is likely to act as an agent of natural selection. We used genomic and candidate gene approaches to search for evidence of such genetic selection. First, a genome-wide allelic differentiation scan (GWADS) comparing indigenous highlanders of the Tibetan Plateau (3,200– 3,500 m) with closely related lowland Han revealed a genome-wide significantdivergenceacrosseightSNPs locatednearEPAS1. Thisgene encodes the transcription factor HIF2α, which stimulates production of red blood cells and thus increases the concentration of hemoglobin in blood. Second, in a separate cohort of Tibetans residing at 4,200m, we identified 31 EPAS1 SNPs in high linkage disequilibrium that correlated significantly with hemoglobin concentration. The sex-ad- justed hemoglobin concentration was, on average, 0.8 g/dL lower in the major allele homozygotes compared with the heterozygotes. These findings were replicated in a third cohort of Tibetans residing at 4,300m. The alleles associatingwith lower hemoglobin concentra- tions were correlated with the signal from the GWADS study and were observed at greatly elevated frequencies in the Tibetan cohorts comparedwith the Han. High hemoglobin concentrations are a cardi- nal feature of chronicmountain sickness offering oneplausiblemech- anism for selection. Alternatively, as EPAS1 is pleiotropic in its effects, selectionmay have operated on someother aspect of the phenotype. Whichever of these explanations is correct, the evidence for genetic selection at the EPAS1 locus from the GWADS study is supported by the replicated studies associating function with the allelic variants.

chronic mountain sickness | high altitude | human genome variation | hypoxia | hypoxia-inducible factor

The high plateaus of Central Asia and the Andes were among the last areas occupied as Homo sapiens spread across the

globe during the past 100,000–200,000 y. In the case of the Ti- betan plateau, early visitors appearedmore than 30,000 y ago, and the plateau has been colonized for more than 10,000 y (1, 2). The low partial pressure of oxygen resulting from the extreme altitude would have presented a formidable biological challenge to such colonists. Individuals from low-altitude populations (European and Han) who move to live at high altitude suffer from a number of potentially lethal diseases specifically related to the low levels of oxygen (3–5) and struggle to reproduce at these altitudes (6–9). The hypoxia of altitude (hypobaric hypoxia) would thus have exerted substantial evolutionary selection pressure.

The classic disease associated with long term residence at high altitude is chronic mountain sickness, or Monge’s disease, after Carlos Monge-Medrano who first identified the condition among Andean highlanders (10). The cardinal feature is a very high concentration of the oxygen-carrying pigment, hemoglobin, in the blood, caused by an overproduction of red blood cells (excessive erythrocytosis). Tibetan highlanders are particularly resistant to developing chronic mountain sickness (4, 11), and exhibit little or no increase in hemoglobin concentration with increasing altitude, even at 4,000 m (13,200 ft) and only moderate increases beyond (12, 13). Typically, Tibetans average at least 1 g/dL and as much as approximately 3.5 gm/dL (i.e. approximately 10–20%) lower hemoglobin concentration in comparison with their Andean counterparts (14–16) or acclimatized lowlanders, such as the Han who have moved to altitudes above 2,500 m (4, 17–23). This sug- gests that Tibetans have evolved a blunted erythropoietic response to high-altitude hypoxia. The induction of erythrocytosis by hyp- oxia involves the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) family of tran- scription factors and, in particular, EPAS1 (or HIF2α) (24, 25). Three independent studies, but with mutually reinforcing

results, were performedby groups that have since come together to form a consortium with the aim of reporting on the findings. The first study was a genome-wide allelic differentiation scan that compared SNP frequencies of a Yunnan Tibetan population re- siding at 3,200–3,500 m with the HapMap Phase III Han sample.

Author contributions: C.M.B., G.L.C., J.C.L., Y.L., H.E.M., P.A.R., S.C.T., N.T., W.W., P.W., L.Y., C.Z., P.Z., and Y.T.Z. designed research; C.M.B., G.L.C., Y.G., C.L., J.C.L., Y.L., M.M., H.P., K.V.S., S.C.T., N.T., W.W., P.W., Z.X., L.Y., C.Z., X.Z., P.Z., and Y.T.Z. performed re- search; G.L.C., L.D., R.C.E., Y.G., J.K., K.R.V., M.E.W., Y.X., Z.X., M.J.Z., and L.Z. analyzed data; and C.M.B., G.L.C., H.E.M., P.A.R., M.E.W., and C.Z. wrote the paper.

The authors are listed alphabetically and declare no conflict of interest.

This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.

Freely available online through the PNAS open access option. 1C.M.B., G.L.C., H.E.M., P.A.R., M.E.W., C.Z., L.Z., and P.Z. contributed equally to this work. 2Present address: Faculty of Basic Medical Science, Nanchang University, Nanchang 330006, China.

3To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]

4Present address: The People’s Hospital of the Tibet Autonomous Region, Lhasa, 850000 Tibet Autonomous Region, China.

This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10. 1073/pnas.1002443107/-/DCSupplemental.

www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1002443107 PNAS | June 22, 2010 | vol. 107 | no. 25 | 11459–11464

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Mitochondrial, Y chromosome, and autosomal DNA evidence all suggest a northor eastAsianorigin formodernTibetans (1, 26–28). Thus, theHan comprise a lowlandpopulation that is closely related to the Tibetans but which has not undergone selection for high- altitude adaptation. From this study, a signal of selection close to EPAS1 was identified at a genome-wide level of significance. The second study comprised a candidate gene analysis of EPAS1 in a separate sample of Tibetans from 4,200m on theTibetan plateau and identified a significant association between genotype and he- moglobin concentration, with the major alleles associating with the lower hemoglobin levels. These alleles were present at low frequency in the Han. The third study replicated the hemoglobin association in an independent sample of Tibetans from 4,300 m.

Results Genome-Wide Allelic Differentiation Scan. A genome-wide allelic differentiation scan (GWADS) was used to compare a cohort of Tibetan residents (n=35) sampled from four townships at altitudes of 3,200–3,500 m in Yunnan Province, China, with HapMap Phase III Han individuals (n = 84). We postulated that any marked differences in SNP frequencies between the Yunnan Tibetan and the HapMap Han populations could reflect a history of divergent selection on functional variation that contributes to increased sur- vival at high altitude. (See SI Materials and Methods for detailed methodology.) Of the 502,722 SNPs that were included in the analysis, eight SNPs emerged as having genome-wide significance (P values ranging from 2.81× 10−7 to 1.49× 10−9), all locatedwithin 235 kb on chromosome 2 (Fig. 1 and Table S1). All eight GWADS significant SNPs were in high pairwise

linkage disequilibrium in the Yunnan sample (0.23< r2 < 0.82), forming an extended haplotype with a frequency of 46% in the Yunnan Tibetan sample but only 2% in the Han sample [esti- mated via an expectation-maximization algorithm using Haplo- view software (29, 30)]. The SNPs lie between 366 bp and 235 kb downstream of EPAS1 but, as we show below, the region of high linkage disequilibrium extends into EPAS1 itself. In addition to this genome-wide significant finding relating to EPAS1, evidence for other signals of selection was also found. Regions of sub- genome wide significance were in close proximity to other genes of the HIF pathway and present intriguing targets for follow-up studies (see SI Text for further details).

Candidate Gene Study for EPAS1. Independent of the GWADS study, a candidate gene study (based on the pathway linking hypoxia, EPAS1, and erythropoietin) addressed the functional consequence of EPAS1 variants by testing for association with

hemoglobin concentration in a sample of 70 Tibetans residing at 4,200 m in Mag Xiang, Xigatse Prefecture in the Tibet Autono- mous Region, China (Table S2). One hundred and three non- coding SNPs across theEPAS1 gene were selected for genotyping. Of these, 49 had a minor allele frequency ≥5%, and were thus amenable to regression analysis (Materials and Methods) that identified 31 SNP sites significantly associated with hemoglobin concentration (Fig. 2 and Table S3). The major (most frequent) allele of every significant SNP was associated with lower hemo- globin concentration. After adjusting for sex differences, indi- viduals who were homozygous for the major allele had an average hemoglobin concentration that was 0.8 ± 0.15 g/dL (range from 0.3 to 1.0 g/dL) lower than individuals who were heterozygous for the major allele. Conditional linear regression analyses showed that once the most significant SNP (rs4953354) was included, no significant improvement in fit was obtained after Bonferroni correction by adding any other SNP, consistent with a single causal variant model. Many of the SNP sites were in high linkage disequilibrium (Fig. 2). Genotypes for the eight GWADS signif- icant SNPs were available on 29 of the 70 individuals in the Mag Xiang cohort, too few to show statistical association with hemo- globin concentration. However, all eight GWADS SNPs were highly correlated (0.54 < r2 ≤ 1) with variants associating with hemoglobin concentration in the complete Mag Xiang cohort (Table S4). Thus, the genome-wide and the candidate-gene analyses can be linked, with the latter study demonstrating that there is a phenotype associated with the signal of selection.

Replication of Candidate Gene Study for EPAS1. We replicated the association of EPAS1 SNPs with hemoglobin concentration in another sample of 91 Tibetans residing at 4,300 m in Zhaxizong Xiang, Xigatse Prefecture, China (Table S2). Of the 49 Mag Xiang SNPs with a minor allele frequency ≥5%, 48 were suc- cessfully genotyped in the Zhaxizong Xiang sample. Of these, 45 sites had a minor allele frequency ≥5% and 32 sites were significantly associated with hemoglobin concentration. After adjusting for sex differences, individuals who were homozygous for the major allele had an average hemoglobin concentration that was 1.0 ± 0.14 g/dL (range from 0.5 to 1.2 g/dL) lower than individuals who were heterozygous for the major allele (Fig. 3 and Table S3). Twenty-six SNPs were associated with hemoglobin concentration in both samples and the direction of the effect was the same. Conditional linear regression again found that, after including the most significant SNP (rs13419896), no further SNPs were significant after Bonferroni correction. This was also the case if the most significant SNP from the Mag Xiang sample

Fig. 1. A genome-wide allelic differentiation scan that compares Tibetan residents at 3,200–3,500 m in Yunnan Province, China with HapMap Han samples. Eight SNPs near one another and EPAS1 have genome-wide significance. The horizontal axis is genomic position with colors indicating chromosomes. The vertical axis is the negative log of SNP-by-SNP P values generated from the Yunnan Tibetan vs. HapMap Han comparison. The red line indicates the threshold for genome-wide significance used (P = 5 × 10−7). Values are shown after correction for background population stratification using genomic control.

11460 | www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1002443107 Beall et al.

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(rs4953354) was used instead of rs13419896. Genotypes for the eight GWADS significant SNPs were available on 89 samples from the Zhaxizong Xiang cohort. Three of these SNPs correlated significantly with hemoglobin concentration (Table S4), thus sup- porting the association of a phenotype with the signal of selection that has been obtained from this area of the genome. Comparing allelic frequencies between the two Tibetan samples

and the HapMap Han sample, we note that the largest allele frequency differences occur at the EPAS1 SNP sites that are as- sociated with low hemoglobin concentration (Fig. 4). Linkage dis- equilibrium (LD) among these 26 SNP sites was also elevated in the twoTibetan cohorts compared with theHapMapHan (SI Text).

Discussion The results from the GWADS study revealed a level of allele frequency differentiation near EPAS1 that far exceeds the ge- nome-wide average (Fig. 1). The association studies demonstrated that the SNP variants that were at higher frequencies within the Tibetan population were associated with lower hemoglobin con- centrations. As large genome-wide association studies of the determinants of hemoglobin concentration in other populations at low altitude have failed to detect a signal associated with EPAS1 (31–34), our results suggest either that there is a genetic variant that is quite specific to the Tibetan population or that the variant is quite specific to moderating hemoglobin concentration only under

conditions of high altitude. Such specificity of effect in relation to Tibetan highlanders is in keeping with a model of selection pres- sure on EPAS1 under the stress of high-altitude hypoxia. In- terestingly, a comparison between the HapMap Han and Andean highlanders—both of whom have a vigorous erythropoietic re- sponse (15)—did not detect selection at the EPAS1 locus (35). It should be noted, however, that the Andean study (35) applied a different array of methodologies to detect selection and over- lapping results are not necessarily expected, given the differing nature of the selection signals that particular techniques are powered to detect. It is also possible that the Andean and Tibetan populations have developed different genetic adaptations to the hypoxia of high altitude given the differences in physiology that are known to exist between these populations (13). The association studies revealed that genetic variation across

EPAS1 accounts for a large proportion of the variation in he- moglobin concentration in these populations. After controlling for sex, the average difference in hemoglobin concentration be- tween major allele homozygotes and heterozygotes was 53% of one SD in theMagXiang sample and 50% in the ZhaxizongXiang sample. In absolute terms, these differences were several fold larger than for any of the determinants of hemoglobin concen- tration in populations residing at low altitude (31–34). Our find- ings are, however, consistent with previous high estimates of heritability (h2) for hemoglobin concentration of 0.66 among

Fig. 2. Sex-adjusted hemoglobin concentrations and allelic variation in EPAS1 SNPs in a Tibetan sample from Mag Xiang (4,200 m), Tibet Autonomous Region, China. Values were, on average, 0.8 g/dL lower for individuals who were homozygous for the major alleles compared with those who were het- erozygous. (Top) The results of testing variants at 49 SNPs with a minor allele frequency ≥5% for genotypic association with sex-adjusted hemoglobin concentration. (Middle) The estimated hemoglobin concentration difference (mean ± 95% confidence interval) between the major allele homozygote and heterozygote genotypes at each SNP. Filled circles represent SNPs detected as having a significant association with hemoglobin concentration, with the false discovery rate controlled at <0.05 across the EPAS1 locus. Open diamonds represent SNPs without significant association. (Bottom) The pairwise linkage disequilibrium measured as r2 between SNPs.

Beall et al. PNAS | June 22, 2010 | vol. 107 | no. 25 | 11461

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Tibetans at 4,850–5,450 m (36) and of 0.86 among Tibetans at 3,800–4,065 m (15). These values estimate the proportion of additive genetic variation relative to total phenotypic variance. The combined findings of our association and conditional linear regression analysis are consistent with a model in which a single causal variant at the EPAS1 locus accounts for a substantial proportion of the heritability. Under this model, hemoglobin- associating SNPs should be interpreted as markers and are pre- sumed to have differentiated because they are closely linked to an as yet to be identified causal variant. Functional studies will be required to identify how this variation works to restrain the hematopoietic response. We have described a signal of natural selection on or near

EPAS1 that is associated with a blunting of the normal erythro- poietic response to hypoxia. As EPAS1 is pleiotropic, other res- ponses to hypoxia may be similarly affected. Some insight into these may be given by studies of a few individuals/families, living at low altitudes, who have been reported to have gain of function mutations inEPAS1 (37–40). As expected, these individuals exhibit excessive erythrocytosis, but they also appear to be particularly susceptible to thrombotic events and to developing pulmonary hypertension—although the total number of cases reported is small. A larger number of cases have been reported for the slightly less specific genetic disorder of Chuvash Polycythemia, where ho- mozygosity for hypomorphic alleles for VHL results in elevated

levels of both HIF1α and EPAS1/HIF2α (41). The phenotype for Chuvash Polycythemia appears very similar to that for the specific EPAS1 gain of function mutations, with excessive erythrocytosis, an excess risk of thrombotic events at a young age, and pulmonary hypertension (42–45). In both conditions, the excessive eryth- rocytosis is generally managed by venesection in the belief that this may reduce the incidence of thrombotic events. The clinical similarity between the phenotypes of these genetic

disorders and chronic mountain sickness is striking. Indeed, it caused one group of investigators to observe in respect of the EPAS1 gain of function mutations that “it raises the possibility that polymorphic variation in HIF2α [EPAS1] contributes to the marked differential susceptibility to erythrocytosis, reduced plasma volume and pulmonary hypertension in humans at high altitude” (39). Chronic mountain sickness occurs among Tibetans at a lower prevalence than Han lowlanders (1.2% compared with 5.6%) living in the Tibet Autonomous Region (4, 46). Chronic mountain sickness remains at that low level throughout adulthood among Tibetans but, in Peruvians, prevalence increases with age from approximately 13% in 20 to 39 y olds to approximately 36% in 55 to 69 y olds at 4,300 m (47). In Andeans, excessive eryth- rocytosis at high altitude has been associated with significant pulmonary hypertension (48), an increased risk of stroke (49), and also an increased risk of poor outcome in pregnancy (stillbirth, preterm birth, or small for gestational age at birth) (50). These

Fig. 3. Sex-adjusted hemoglobin concentrations and allelic variation in EPAS1 SNPs in a Tibetan sample from Zhaxizong Xiang (4,300 m), Tibet Autonomous Region, China. Values were, on average, 1.0 g/dL lower for individuals who were homozygous for the major alleles compared with those who were het- erozygous (Top) The results of testing variants at 45 SNPs with a minor allele frequency ≥5% for genotypic association with sex-adjusted hemoglobin concentration. (Middle) The estimated hemoglobin concentration difference (mean ± 95% confidence interval) between the major allele homozygote and heterozygote genotypes at each SNP. Filled circles represent SNP detected as having a significant association with hemoglobin concentration with the false discovery rate controlled at <0.05 across the EPAS1 locus. Open diamonds represent SNP without significant association. (Bottom) The pairwise linkage disequilibrium measured as r2 between SNPs.

11462 | www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1002443107 Beall et al.

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findings provide insight into some of the sources of elevated morbidity and mortality on which selection may have operated to influence allelic frequencies for EPAS1 among the early colo- nizers of the Tibetan plateau. Although the similarity between chronic mountain sickness

and the EPAS1 gain of function phenotype in lowlanders is striking, there nevertheless may be other aspects to the pheno- type that are not revealed at low altitude but are only revealed at high altitude, when oxygen availability is also limited. In partic- ular, EPAS1 plays very important, if still poorly understood, roles in both placental and embryonic development (51–54) and pos- sibly also in the pathogenesis of fetal growth restriction (55). It is well recognized that reproductive success is more difficult at high altitude than at low altitude, and more difficult for nonnatives than natives (6). For example, pre- and postnatal mortality are threefold higher in the Han than in the Tibetans, and birth weight is significantly lower (56). This may relate in part to the presence of greater uterine arterial blood flow and lower he- moglobin concentration in the Tibetans (9, 57). As such, natural selection on EPAS1 may also have operated via effects during pregnancy that affect both pre- and postnatal mortality. In conclusion, this study provides evidence for natural selection

in Tibetan highlanders at a specific human gene locus. The finding is further supported by a demonstration, in two independent samples, that genetic variation at this locus has an associated phenotype. The known physiological roles associated with this gene locus provide insight into some of the factors that are likely to have influenced human adaptation and survival following col- onization of the Tibetan Plateau.

Materials and Methods Human Volunteers. Ethics and consent. This study was approved by the ethics committees of the Yunnan Population and Family Planning Institute (Kunming, China); the Beijing Genomics Institute at Shenzhen (Shenzhen, China); the Beijing Institute of Genomics, Chinese Academy of Sciences (Bei- jing, China)and Case Western University (Cleveland, OH). All work was con- ducted in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. All participants were recruited after obtaining informed consent. Sample collection. SamplingwasconductedinthreegeographicregionsofChina approximately 2,400 kilometers apart. Theywere (i) theNorthWestern region of Yunnan province (28°26’N 98°52’E), (ii) Mag Xiang, Xigatse Prefecture, Tibet Autonomous Region (29°15’N 88°53’E), and (iii) Zhaxizong Xiang,

Xig

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