4.6 Article

Low Diversity of Human Variation Despite Mostly Mild Functional Impact of De Novo Variants

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MOLECULAR BIOSCIENCES
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2021.635382

Keywords

variation; adaptation; evolution; nsSNVs; SNAP; cross-species variation; common variation

Funding

  1. NIH (National Institutes of Health) [U01 GM115486]
  2. NIH [R01 MH115958]

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Research shows that while humans carry a large number of SAVs in their genomes, many have little impact on protein function. Some unobserved SAVs may have significant functional effects, but most only have mild effects. Common variants are more likely to occur in less conserved protein positions and have mild to moderate effects, while rare variants are more likely to have severe effects.
Non-synonymous Single Nucleotide Variants (nsSNVs), resulting in single amino acid variants (SAVs), are important drivers of evolutionary adaptation across the tree of life. Humans carry on average over 10,000 SAVs per individual genome, many of which likely have little to no impact on the function of the protein they affect. Experimental evidence for protein function changes as a result of SAVs remain sparse - a situation that can be somewhat alleviated by predicting their impact using computational methods. Here, we used SNAP to examine both observed and in silico generated human variation in a set of 1,265 proteins that are consistently found across a number of diverse species. The number of SAVs that are predicted to have any functional effect on these proteins is smaller than expected, suggesting sequence/function optimization over evolutionary timescales. Additionally, we find that only a few of the yet-unobserved SAVs could drastically change the function of these proteins, while nearly a quarter would have only a mild functional effect. We observed that variants common in the human population localized to less conserved protein positions and carried mild to moderate functional effects more frequently than rare variants. As expected, rare variants carried severe effects more frequently than common variants. In line with current assumptions, we demonstrated that the change of the human reference sequence amino acid to the reference of another species (a cross-species variant) is unlikely to significantly impact protein function. However, we also observed that many cross-species variants may be weakly non-neutral for the purposes of quick adaptation to environmental changes, but may not be identified as such by current state-of-the-art methodology.

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