4.7 Article

Origin, distribution, and function of three frequent coding polymorphisms in the gene for the human P2X7 ion channel

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.1033135

Keywords

ATP; adenosine triphosphate; ATP-gated P2X ion channel; ion channel; purinergic receptor; single nucleotide polymorphism; loss of function

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
  2. [310/11]
  3. [310/13]
  4. [310/14]
  5. [SFB1328]
  6. [Z02]

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P2X7, an ion channel gated by extracellular ATP, plays important roles in inflammation and apoptosis. Polymorphisms in the P2X7 gene are common, and their frequencies vary among different human populations. Considering P2X7 variants of participants is important in designing clinical trials targeting P2X7.
P2X7, an ion channel gated by extracellular ATP, is widely expressed on the plasma membrane of immune cells and plays important roles in inflammation and apoptosis. Several single nucleotide polymorphisms have been identified in the human P2RX7 gene. In contrast to other members of the P2X family, non-synonymous polymorphisms in P2X7 are common. Three of these occur at overall frequencies of more than 25% and affect residues in the extracellular head -domain of P2X7 (155 Y/H), its lower body (270 R/H), and its tail in the second transmembrane domain (348 T/A). Comparison of the P2X7 orthologues of human and other great apes indicates that the ancestral allele is Y-R-T (at 155-270-348). Interestingly, each single amino acid variant displays lower ATP-sensitivity than the ancestral allele. The originally published reference sequence of human P2X7, often referred to as wildtype, differs from the ancestral allele at all three positions, i.e. H-H-A. The 1,000 Genome Project determined the sequences of both alleles of 2,500 human individuals, including roughly 500 persons from each of the five major continental regions. This rich resource shows that the ancestral alleles Y155, R270, and T348 occur in all analyzed human populations, albeit at strikingly different frequencies in various subpopulations (e.g., 25%-59% for Y155, 59%-77% for R270, and 13%-47% for T348). BLAST analyses of ancient human genome sequences uncovered several homozygous carriers of variant P2X7 alleles, possibly reflecting a high degree of inbreeding, e.g., H-R-T for a 50.000 year old Neanderthal, H-R-A for a 24.000 year old Siberian, and Y-R-A for a 7,000 year old mesolithic European. In contrast, most present-day individuals co-express two copies of P2X7 that differ in one or more amino acids at positions 155, 270, and 348. Our results improve the understanding of how P2X7 structure affects its function and suggest the importance of considering P2X7 variants of participants when designing clinical trials targeting P2X7.

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