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Adaptive landscape of protein variation in human exomes

Ravi Patel, Maxwell D Sanderford, Tamera R Lanham, Koichiro Tamura, Alexander Platt, Benjamin S Gilksberg, Joel T Dudley, Laura B. Scheinfeldt, Ke Xu, Sudhir Kumar
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/282152
Ravi Patel
Temple University;
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Maxwell D Sanderford
Temple University;
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Tamera R Lanham
Temple University;
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Koichiro Tamura
Tokyo Metropolitan University;
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Alexander Platt
Temple University;
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Benjamin S Gilksberg
Mount Sinai School of Medicine;
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Joel T Dudley
Mount Sinai School of Medicine;
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Laura B. Scheinfeldt
Coriell Institute for Medical Research;
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Ke Xu
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
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Sudhir Kumar
Temple University;
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  • For correspondence: s.kumar@temple.edu
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Abstract

The human genome contains hundreds of thousands of missense mutations. However, only a handful of these variants are known to be adaptive, which implies that adaptation through protein sequence change is an extremely rare phenomenon in human evolution. Alternatively, existing methods may lack the power to pinpoint adaptive variation. We have developed and applied an Evolutionary Probability Approach (EPA) to discover candidate adaptive polymorphisms (CAPs) through the discordance between allelic evolutionary probabilities and their observed frequencies in human populations. EPA reveals thousands of missense CAPs, which suggest that a large number of previously optimal alleles had experienced a reversal of fortune in the human lineage. We explored non-adaptive mechanisms to explain CAPs, including the effects of demography, mutation rate variability, and negative and positive selective pressures in modern humans. Our analyses suggest that a large proportion of CAP alleles have increased in frequency due to beneficial selection. This conclusion is supported by the facts that a vast majority of adaptive missense variants discovered previously in humans are CAPs, and that hundreds of CAP alleles are protective in genotype-phenotype association data. Our integrated phylogenomic and population genetic EPA approach predicts the existence of thousands of signatures of non-neutral evolution in the human proteome. We expect this collection to be enriched in beneficial variation. EPA approach can be applied to discover candidate adaptive variation in any protein, population, or species for which allele frequency data and reliable multispecies alignments are available.

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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 March 14, 2018.

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Adaptive landscape of protein variation in human exomes
Ravi Patel, Maxwell D Sanderford, Tamera R Lanham, Koichiro Tamura, Alexander Platt, Benjamin S Gilksberg, Joel T Dudley, Laura B. Scheinfeldt, Ke Xu, Sudhir Kumar
bioRxiv 282152; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/282152
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Adaptive landscape of protein variation in human exomes
Ravi Patel, Maxwell D Sanderford, Tamera R Lanham, Koichiro Tamura, Alexander Platt, Benjamin S Gilksberg, Joel T Dudley, Laura B. Scheinfeldt, Ke Xu, Sudhir Kumar
bioRxiv 282152; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/282152

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