Abstract

High altitude represents some of the most extreme environments worldwide. The genetic changes underlying adaptation to such environments have been recently identified in multiple animals but remain unknown in horses. Here, we sequence the complete genome of 138 domestic horses encompassing a whole altitudinal range across China to uncover the genetic basis for adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia. Our genome data set includes 65 lowland animals across ten Chinese native breeds, 61 horses living at least 3,300 m above sea level across seven locations along Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, as well as 7 Thoroughbred and 5 Przewalski’s horses added for comparison. We find that Tibetan horses do not descend from Przewalski’s horses but were most likely introduced from a distinct horse lineage, following the emergence of pastoral nomadism in Northwestern China ∼3,700 years ago. We identify that the endothelial PAS domain protein 1 gene (EPAS1, also HIF2A) shows the strongest signature for positive selection in the Tibetan horse genome. Two missense mutations at this locus appear strongly associated with blood physiological parameters facilitating blood circulation as well as oxygen transportation and consumption in hypoxic conditions. Functional validation through protein mutagenesis shows that these mutations increase EPAS1 stability and its hetero dimerization affinity to ARNT (HIF1B). Our study demonstrates that missense mutations in the EPAS1 gene provided key evolutionary molecular adaptation to Tibetan horses living in high-altitude hypoxic environments. It reveals possible targets for genomic selection programs aimed at increasing hypoxia tolerance in livestock and provides a textbook example of evolutionary convergence across independent mammal lineages.

Highlights

  • Hypoxia and ultraviolet exposure are key characteristics of high-altitude environments

  • We identified that the endothelial PAS domain protein 1 (EPAS1) gene and the hemoglobin subunit epsilon 1 (HBE1) gene showed some of the strongest signatures of positive selection in the Tibetan horse genome

  • Our work reveals that two nonsynonymous mutations located in the otherwise conserved PAS-A and PAS-B domains of the EPAS1 gene are key adaptations to hypoxia in Tibetan horses

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Summary

Introduction

Hypoxia and ultraviolet exposure are key characteristics of high-altitude environments. Recent functional genomic studies have revealed the genetic basis of adaption to highaltitude hypoxia in Tibetan people (Simonson et al 2010; Yi et al 2014), Tibetan dogs (Wang et al 2014), antelopes (Ge et al 2013) and gray wolves (Zhang et al 2014). The EPAS1 gene encodes one subunit of the hypoxiainducible factor (HIF) and shows multifarious effects, including the regulation of angiogenesis, hemoglobin concentration (HMG) and erythrocytosis (Beall et al 2010). Other convergent modifications of metabolic pathways and the composition of rumen microbiota (Zhang et al 2016) have been described in Tibetan Sherpas (Horscroft et al 2017), the yak (Qiu et al 2012), and other high-altitude mammals (Ge et al 2013)

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