APOBEC3 genes encode cytidine deaminases endowed with the ability to inhibit retroviruses and retrotransposons. These genes have been targets of natural selection throughout primate evolutionary history. We analyzed their selection pattern in human populations observing that APOBEC3F and 3G are neutrally evolving. Conversely, nucleotide diversity was extremely high for APOBEC3H, and most tests rejected the hypothesis of selective neutrality in Eurasian populations. Haplotype analysis and the derived intraallelic nucleotide diversity test indicated that positive selection has driven the increase in frequency of one haplotype (Hap I) outside Africa. Consistently, population genetic differentiation between African and non-African populations was higher than expected under neutrality. A case-control association analysis indicated that Hap I is associated with protection from sexually transmitted HIV-1 infection. Hap I carries a protein-destabilizing variant and a residue conferring resistance to Vif-mediated degradation. Data herein suggest that lower protein stability might have been traded-off with a higher ability to circumvent Vif-mediated hijacking. Alternatively, transcription regulatory variants might represent the selection target. Our data represent an example of how the selective pressures exerted by extinct or unknown viral agents can be exploited to provide valuable information on the allelic determinants of susceptibility to modern infections.

A positively selected APOBEC3H haplotype is associated with natural resistance to HIV-1 infection / R. Cagliani, S. Riva, M. Fumagalli, M. Biasin, S. L. Caputo, F. Mazzotta, L. Piacentini, U. Pozzoli, N. Bresolin, M. Clerici, M. Sironi. - In: EVOLUTION. - ISSN 0014-3820. - 65:11(2011 Nov), pp. 3311-3322.

A positively selected APOBEC3H haplotype is associated with natural resistance to HIV-1 infection

M. Biasin;N. Bresolin;M. Clerici;
2011

Abstract

APOBEC3 genes encode cytidine deaminases endowed with the ability to inhibit retroviruses and retrotransposons. These genes have been targets of natural selection throughout primate evolutionary history. We analyzed their selection pattern in human populations observing that APOBEC3F and 3G are neutrally evolving. Conversely, nucleotide diversity was extremely high for APOBEC3H, and most tests rejected the hypothesis of selective neutrality in Eurasian populations. Haplotype analysis and the derived intraallelic nucleotide diversity test indicated that positive selection has driven the increase in frequency of one haplotype (Hap I) outside Africa. Consistently, population genetic differentiation between African and non-African populations was higher than expected under neutrality. A case-control association analysis indicated that Hap I is associated with protection from sexually transmitted HIV-1 infection. Hap I carries a protein-destabilizing variant and a residue conferring resistance to Vif-mediated degradation. Data herein suggest that lower protein stability might have been traded-off with a higher ability to circumvent Vif-mediated hijacking. Alternatively, transcription regulatory variants might represent the selection target. Our data represent an example of how the selective pressures exerted by extinct or unknown viral agents can be exploited to provide valuable information on the allelic determinants of susceptibility to modern infections.
APOBEC3H; Cytidine deaminase genes; Haplotype; HIV-1 infection; Positive selection
Settore MED/04 - Patologia Generale
Settore BIO/13 - Biologia Applicata
nov-2011
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Cagliani_et_al-2011-Evolution.pdf

accesso riservato

Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 497 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
497 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/178417
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 9
  • Scopus 18
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 18
social impact