4.8 Article

Dietary, Cultural, and Pathogens-Related Selective Pressures Shaped Differential Adaptive Evolution among Native Mexican Populations

期刊

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 39, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msab290

关键词

adaptive evolution; disease susceptibility; Native Mexican populations

资金

  1. National Council of Science and Technology (CONACyT) of Mexico [755288, 711247]
  2. FONDAZIONE CASSA DI RISPARMIO IN BOLOGNA [CONACyT PNPC 000091, CONACyT PNPC 003649]
  3. CONACyT [2019.0552]
  4. Newton Fund [FONCICYT/50/2016]
  5. [MR/N028937/1]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The genetic ancestry of Native Americans is linked to increased risk of health issues in Mexican populations due to recent environmental, dietary, and cultural changes. Indigenous Mexican groups may have retained the highest proportions of genetic components shaped by ancient environments, impacting biological traits and disease risk patterns. Adaptive variants evolved in response to local conditions may play a role in modulating susceptibility to certain diseases in present-day Native and Mestizo Mexican populations.
Native American genetic ancestry has been remarkably implicated with increased risk of diverse health issues in several Mexican populations, especially in relation to the dramatic changes in environmental, dietary, and cultural settings they have recently undergone. In particular, the effects of these ecological transitions and Westernization of lifestyles have been investigated so far predominantly on Mestizo individuals. Nevertheless, indigenous groups, rather than admixed Mexicans, have plausibly retained the highest proportions of genetic components shaped by natural selection in response to the ancient milieu experienced by Mexican ancestors during their pre-Columbian evolutionary history. These formerly adaptive variants have the potential to represent the genetic determinants of some biological traits that are peculiar to Mexican people, as well as a reservoir of loci with possible biomedical relevance. To test such a hypothesis, we used genome-wide genotype data to infer the unique adaptive evolution of Native Mexican groups selected as reasonable descendants of the main pre-Columbian Mexican civilizations. A combination of haplotype-based and gene-network analyses enabled us to detect genomic signatures ascribable to polygenic adaptive traits plausibly evolved by the main genetic clusters of Mexican indigenous populations to cope with local environmental and/or cultural conditions. Some of these adaptations were found to play a role in modulating the susceptibility/resistance of these groups to certain pathological conditions, thus providing new evidence that diverse selective pressures have contributed to shape the current biological and disease-risk patterns of present-day Native and Mestizo Mexican populations.

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