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Polygenic selection underlies evolution of human brain structure and behavioral traits

View ORCID ProfileEvan R. Beiter, View ORCID ProfileEkaterina A. Khramtsova, View ORCID ProfileCelia van der Merwe, View ORCID ProfileEmile Rugamika Chimusa, Corinne Simonti, Jason Stein, View ORCID ProfilePaul Thompson, View ORCID ProfileSimon Fisher, View ORCID ProfileDan J. Stein, John A. Capra, View ORCID ProfileJames A. Knowles, View ORCID ProfileBarbara E. Stranger, View ORCID ProfileLea K. Davis
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/164707
Evan R. Beiter
Washington University;
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Ekaterina A. Khramtsova
University of Chicago;
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Celia van der Merwe
University of Cape Town;
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Emile Rugamika Chimusa
University of Cape Town;
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Corinne Simonti
Vanderbilt University;
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Jason Stein
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill;
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Paul Thompson
Keck USC School of Medicine;
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Simon Fisher
Radbound University; Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics;
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Dan J. Stein
University of Cape Town;
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John A. Capra
Vanderbilt University;
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James A. Knowles
State University of New York Downstate Medical Center
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Barbara E. Stranger
University of Chicago;
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Lea K. Davis
Vanderbilt University;
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  • For correspondence: lea.k.davis@gmail.com
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Abstract

Seemingly paradoxical characteristics of psychiatric disorders, including moderate to high prevalence, reduced fecundity, and high heritability have motivated explanations for the persistence of common risk alleles for severe psychiatric phenotypes throughout human evolution. Proposed mechanisms include balancing selection, drift, and weak polygenic adaptation acting either directly, or indirectly through selection on correlated traits. While many mechanisms have been proposed, few have been empirically tested. Leveraging publicly available data of unprecedented sample size, we studied twenty-five traits (i.e., ten neuropsychiatric disorders, three personality traits, total intracranial volume, seven subcortical brain structure volume traits, and four complex traits without neuropsychiatric associations) for evidence of several different signatures of selection over a range of evolutionary time scales. Consistent with the largely polygenic architecture of neuropsychiatric traits, we found no enrichment of trait-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in regions of the genome that underwent classical selective sweeps (i.e., events which would have driven selected alleles to near fixation). However, we discovered that SNPs associated with some, but not all, behaviors and brain structure volumes are enriched in genomic regions under selection since divergence from Neanderthals ~600,000 years ago, and show further evidence for signatures of ancient and recent polygenic adaptation. Individual subcortical brain structure volumes demonstrate genome-wide evidence in support of a mosaic theory of brain evolution while total intracranial volume and height appear to share evolutionary constraints consistent with concerted evolution. We further characterized the biological processes potentially targeted by selection, through expression Quantitative Trait Locus (eQTL) and Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analyses and found evidence for the role of regulatory functions among selected SNPs in immune and brain tissues. Taken together, our results suggest that alleles associated with neuropsychiatric, behavioral, and brain volume phenotypes have experienced both ancient and recent polygenic adaptation in human evolution, acting through neurodevelopmental and immune-mediated pathways.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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  • Posted September 9, 2017.

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Polygenic selection underlies evolution of human brain structure and behavioral traits
Evan R. Beiter, Ekaterina A. Khramtsova, Celia van der Merwe, Emile Rugamika Chimusa, Corinne Simonti, Jason Stein, Paul Thompson, Simon Fisher, Dan J. Stein, John A. Capra, James A. Knowles, Barbara E. Stranger, Lea K. Davis
bioRxiv 164707; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/164707
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Polygenic selection underlies evolution of human brain structure and behavioral traits
Evan R. Beiter, Ekaterina A. Khramtsova, Celia van der Merwe, Emile Rugamika Chimusa, Corinne Simonti, Jason Stein, Paul Thompson, Simon Fisher, Dan J. Stein, John A. Capra, James A. Knowles, Barbara E. Stranger, Lea K. Davis
bioRxiv 164707; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/164707

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