Published May 3, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Human local adaptation of the TRPM8 cold receptor along a latitudinal cline

  • 1. Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. University of California Davis
  • 4. Basque Foundation for Science

Description

Ambient temperature is a critical environmental factor for all living organisms. It was likely an important selective force as modern humans recently colonized temperate and cold Eurasian environments. Nevertheless, as of yet we have limited evidence of local adaptation to ambient temperature in populations from those environments. To shed light on this question, we exploit the fact that humans are a cosmopolitan species that inhabit territories under a wide range of temperatures. Focusing on cold perception–which is central to thermoregulation and survival in cold environments–we show evidence of recent local adaptation on TRPM8. This gene encodes for a cation channel that is, to date, the only temperature receptor known to mediate an endogenous response to moderate cold. The upstream variant rs10166942 shows extreme population differentiation, with frequencies that range from 5% in Nigeria to 88% in Finland (placing this SNP in the 0.02% tail of the FST empirical distribution). When all populations are jointly analyzed, allele frequencies correlate with latitude and temperature beyond what can be explained by shared ancestry and population substructure. Using a Bayesian approach, we infer that the allele originated and evolved neutrally in Africa, while positive selection raised its frequency to different degrees in Eurasian populations, resulting in allele frequencies that follow a latitudinal cline. We infer strong positive selection, in agreement with ancient DNA showing high frequency of the allele in Europe 3,000 to 8,000 years ago. rs10166942 is important phenotypically because its ancestral allele is protective of migraine. This debilitating disorder varies in prevalence across human populations, with highest prevalence in individuals of European descent–precisely the population with the highest frequency of rs10166942 derived allele. We thus hypothesize that local adaptation on previously neutral standing variation may have contributed to the genetic differences that exist in the prevalence of migraine among human populations today.

Data availability

All computer code and data used for this project, excluding publicly available genomic data, is available at GitHub (https://github.com/keyfm/eva/tree/master/trpm8) and also mirrored to the webserver of the MPI for Evolutionary Anthropology (https://bioinf.eva.mpg.de/download/trpm8/). Additional data are available as follows: 1000Genomes genotypes from http://ftp.1000genomes.ebi.ac.uk/vol1/ftp/release/20130502; 1000Genomes recombination rate from ftp://ftp.1000genomes.ebi.ac.uk/vol1/ftp/technical/working/20130507_omni_recombination_rates/; SGDP v3 from http://sharehost.hms.harvard.edu/genetics/reich_lab/cteam_lite_public3.tar; Temperature Time Series from http://browse.ceda.ac.uk/browse/badc/cru/data/cru_ts/cru_ts_3.23/data/tmp; Ancient Paleo-Eskimo from http://www.binf.ku.dk/Saqqaq; and Ancient Eurasian analysis from https://genetics.med.harvard.edu/reich/Reich_Lab/Datasets.html.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.1007298
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:6560

Related works

Funding

Max Planck Society
Department of Health of the Basque Government
2015111133
National Institute of Health
HG007089
Swiss National Science Foundaton
early postdoc mobility fellowship
National Institute of Neurological Disorder and Stroke
R00NS083627
Alfred P. Sloan
research fellowship
National Institute of Health
T32 Training Program

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Human Genetics