Abstract

A number of loci are associated with highly heritable schizophrenia and the prevalence of this mental illness has had considerable negative fitness effects on human populations. Here we focused on one particular schizophrenia-associated gene that encodes a sialyltransferase (ST8SIA2) and is expressed preferentially in the brain with the level being largely determined by three SNPs in the promoter region. It is suggested that the expression level of the ST8SIA2 gene is a genetic determinant of schizophrenia risk, and we found that a geographically differentiated non-risk SNP type (CGC-type) has significantly reduced promoter activity. A newly developed method for detecting ongoing positive selection was applied to the ST8SIA2 genomic region with the identification of an unambiguous sweep signal in a rather restricted region of 18 kb length surrounding the promoter. We also found that while the CGC-type emerged in anatomically modern humans in Africa over 100 thousand years ago, it has increased its frequency in Asia only during the past 20–30 thousand years. These findings support that the positive selection is driven by psychosocial stress due to changing social environments since around the last glacial maximum, and raise a possibility that schizophrenia extensively emerged during the Upper Paleolithic and Neolithic era.

Highlights

  • Schizophrenia is a highly heritable mental illness that causes marked social impairment

  • We could not detect any significant signals of positive selection on the CGC-type using FST and similar statistics

  • Other methods based on site frequency spectrum (SFS) and LRH have failed to detect convincing signals of positive selection on the CGC-type of the ST8SIA2 gene

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Summary

Introduction

Schizophrenia is a highly heritable mental illness that causes marked social impairment. More than 100 loci are associated with schizophrenia (e.g., [1]), and environmental risk factors interact with such genetic risk factors toward development of the illness [2]. Schizophrenia affects approximately 1% of the human population worldwide and its onset typically occurs during the period of late adolescence and early adulthood. Schizophrenia is a prevalent mental illness with serious negative fitness effects and has posed an evolutionary paradox in human evolution. The ST8 alpha-N-acetyl-neuraminide alpha-2,8-sialyltransferase 2 (ST8SIA2) gene (15q26.1) encodes a sialyltransferase that synthesizes polysialic acid (PSA) in the brain [3]. Sialic acids are a family of nine-carbon monosaccharides found on the outer end of glycan

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