| Literature DB >> 18231591 |
Mehmet Somel1, Hilliary Creely, Henriette Franz, Uwe Mueller, Michael Lachmann, Philipp Khaitovich, Svante Pääbo.
Abstract
Although the human diet is markedly different from the diets of closely related primate species, the influence of diet on phenotypic and genetic differences between humans and other primates is unknown. In this study, we analyzed gene expression in laboratory mice fed diets typical of humans and of chimpanzees. The effects of human diets were found to be significantly different from that of a chimpanzee diet in the mouse liver, but not in the brain. Importantly, 10% of the genes that differ in their expression between humans and chimpanzee livers differed also between the livers of mice fed the human and chimpanzee diets. Furthermore, both the promoter sequences and the amino acid sequences of these diet-related genes carry more differences between humans and chimpanzees than random genes. Our results suggest that the mouse can be used to study at least some aspects of human-specific traits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18231591 PMCID: PMC2200793 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The effects diet on gene expression in mice.
The height of each column indicates the percentage of genes showing expression differences (at ANOVA p<0.01) between mice fed two different diets, in liver (green) or brain (blue). The lighter coloured stem of each column shows the percentage of diet-related genes that would be expected by chance alone, calculated by means of 1,000 permutations. The labels are: Chimp-chimpanzee diet; Cafe-human cafeteria diet; F.Food-human fast food diet; Cafe+F.Food-human cafeteria and fast food diets together.
Figure 2Overlap between liver gene expression differences in mice and primates.
The numbers of human-mouse orthologous genes differentially expressed (at ANOVA p<0.01) between mice fed human diets and a chimpanzee diet in liver (green circle), and genes differentially expressed (at t-test p<0.01) between human and chimpanzee livers (orange circle). The number in the overlap between the two circles (red) indicates genes showing significant expression differences in both data sets. A total of 5,546 genes with detectable expression in both data sets show no significant expression differences in either data set.
Biological processes significantly enriched in genes potentially involved in human-chimpanzee dietary differences.
| Gene Ontology category | # Diet-related genes (total 87) | # Non-diet-related genes (total 711) |
|
| Vitamin metabolism | 3 | 1 | 0.005 |
| Sodium ion transport | 3 | 1 | 0.005 |
| Amino acid biosynthesis | 4 | 2 | 0.002 |
| Positive regulation of transcription | 4 | 4 | 0.007 |
| Amino acid and derivative metabolism | 11 | 17 | 0.006 |
| Carboxylic acid metabolism | 15 | 32 | 0.003 |
| Organismal physiological process | 17 | 63 | 0.003 |
The number of human genes with mouse orthologs showing expression differences between humans and chimpanzees and between mice fed human and chimpanzee diets in liver, and are found within the relevant GO category.
The number of human genes with mouse orthologs showing expression differences between humans and chimpanzees in liver, but not between mice fed human and chimpanzee diets, and are found within the relevant GO category.
Hypergeometric test p-value for the GO category being enriched in diet-related genes relative to control genes.
Figure 3Sequence divergence of genes potentially involved in human-chimpanzee dietary differences.
Median sequence divergence estimates between humans and chimpanzees is shown for promoter regions (left) and for amino acid sequences (Ka/Ki) (right). The error bars represent 95% bootstrap confidence intervals for the median, calculated by resampling from the divergence estimate distributions for each gene set 1,000 times. Diet diff.-Human genes with mouse orthologs showing diet-related human-chimpanzee expression differences in liver; All diff.-Human genes with mouse orthologs showing human-chimpanzee expression differences in liver; All exprs.-Human genes with mouse orthologs expressed in liver; All genes-All available human genes with mouse orthologs.