Genome-wide detection of natural selection in African Americans pre-and post-admixture
- 1 CAS-MPG Partner Institute for Computational Biology;
- 2 Chinese National Human Genome Center at Shanghai;
- 3 Shanghai Children's Medical Center, Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine, Shanghai 200127;
- 4 Fudan University
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: lijin.fudan{at}gmail.com
Abstract
It is particularly meaningful to investigate natural selection in African Americans (AfA) due to the high mortality their African ancestry has experienced in history. In this study, we examined 491,526 autosomal SNPs genotyped in 5,210 individuals and conducted a genome-wide search for selection signals in 1,890 AfA. Several genomic regions showing excess of African or European ancestry, which were thought as the footprints of selection since population admixture, were detected based on a commonly used approach. However, we also developed a new strategy to detect natural selection both pre-and post-admixture by reconstructing an ancestral African population (AAF) from inferred African components of ancestry in AfA and comparing it with indigenous African populations (IAF). Interestingly, many selection-candidate genes identified by the new approach were associated with AfA specific high-risk diseases such as prostate cancer and hypertension, suggesting an important role these disease-related genes might have played in adapting to new environment. CD36 and HBB, whose mutations confer a degree of protection against malaria, were also located in the highly differentiated regions between AAF and IAF. Further analysis showed that the frequencies of alleles protecting against malaria in AAF were lower than that in IAF, which consists with the relaxed selection pressure of malaria in the New World. There is no overlap between the top candidate genes detected by the two approaches, indicating the different environmental pressures AfA experienced pre-and post-population-admixture. We suggest that the new approach is reasonably powerful and can also be applied to other admixed populations such as Latinos and Uyghurs.
- Received April 14, 2011.
- Accepted November 9, 2011.
- Copyright © 2011, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press











