Abstract

BackgroundFitness epistasis, the interaction effect of genes at different loci on fitness, makes an important contribution to adaptive evolution. Although fitness interaction evidence has been observed in model organisms, it is more difficult to detect and remains poorly understood in human populations as a result of limited statistical power and experimental constraints. Fitness epistasis is inferred from non-independence between unlinked loci. We previously observed ancestral block correlation between chromosomes 4 and 6 in African Americans. The same approach fails when examining ancestral blocks on the same chromosome due to the strong confounding effect observed in a recently admixed population.ResultsWe developed a novel approach to eliminate the bias caused by admixture linkage disequilibrium when searching for fitness epistasis on the same chromosome. We applied this approach in 16,252 unrelated African Americans and identified significant ancestral correlations in two pairs of genomic regions (P-value< 8.11 × 10− 7) on chromosomes 1 and 10. The ancestral correlations were not explained by population admixture. Historical African-European crossover events are reduced between pairs of epistatic regions. We observed multiple pairs of co-expressed genes shared by the two regions on each chromosome, including ADAR being co-expressed with IFI44 in almost all tissues and DARC being co-expressed with VCAM1, S1PR1 and ELTD1 in multiple tissues in the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) data. Moreover, the co-expressed gene pairs are associated with the same diseases/traits in the GWAS Catalog, such as white blood cell count, blood pressure, lung function, inflammatory bowel disease and educational attainment.ConclusionsOur analyses revealed two instances of fitness epistasis on chromosomes 1 and 10, and the findings suggest a potential approach to improving our understanding of adaptive evolution.

Highlights

  • Fitness epistasis, the interaction effect of genes at different loci on fitness, makes an important contribution to adaptive evolution

  • A signature of co-evolution has been observed for the killer immunoglobulin receptor (KIR) and the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) loci, where strong negative correlation exists between the gene frequencies of KIR and the corresponding HLA ligand [28]

  • Our basic idea is that the ancestral correlations between two loci after eliminating the effect induced by population admixture suggests fitness epistasis [3]

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Summary

Introduction

The interaction effect of genes at different loci on fitness, makes an important contribution to adaptive evolution. Fitness interaction evidence has been observed in model organisms, it is more difficult to detect and remains poorly understood in human populations as a result of limited statistical power and experimental constraints. The same approach fails when examining ancestral blocks on the same chromosome due to the strong confounding effect observed in a recently admixed population. Fitness epistasis refers to the interactive effects among genetic variants at different loci on fitness, and has important consequences for adaptive evolution [20]. A signature of co-evolution has been observed for the killer immunoglobulin receptor (KIR) and the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) loci, where strong negative correlation exists between the gene frequencies of KIR and the corresponding HLA ligand [28]. Combinations of KIR and HLA variants have different degrees of resistance to infectious diseases that affect human survival during epidemics [31]

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