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Increased constraints on MC4R during primate and human evolution

✍ Scribed by David A. Hughes; Anke Hinney; Harald Brumm; Anne-Kathrin Wermter; Heike Biebermann; Johannes Hebebrand; Mark Stoneking


Book ID
106134773
Publisher
Springer
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
590 KB
Volume
124
Category
Article
ISSN
0340-6717

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✦ Synopsis


The melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R) is routinely investigated for the role it plays in human obesity, as mutations in MC4R are the most common dominantly inherited form of the disease. As little is known about the evolutionary history of this locus, we investigated patterns of variation at MC4R in a worldwide sample of 1,015 humans from 51 populations, and in 8 central chimpanzees. There is a significant paucity of diversity at MC4R in humans, but not in chimpanzees. The spectrum of mutations in humans, combined with the overall low level of diversity, suggests that most (if not all) of the observed non-synonymous polymorphisms are likely to be transient deleterious mutations. The MC4R coding region was resequenced in 12 primate species and sequences from an additional 29 vertebrates were included in molecular evolutionary analyses. MC4R is highly conserved throughout vertebrate evolution, and has apparently been subject to high levels of continuous purifying selection that increased approximately threefold during primate evolution. Furthermore, the strong selection extends to codon usage bias, where most silent mutations are expected to be either quickly fixed or removed from the population, which may help explain the unusually low levels of silent polymorphisms in humans. Finally, there is a significant tendency for non-synonymous mutations that impact MC4R function to occur preferentially at sites that are identified by evolutionary analyses as being subject to very strong purifying selection. The information from this study should help inform future epidemiological investigations of MC4R.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00439-008-0591-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.


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