| Literature DB >> 22151998 |
Ashley J R Carter1, Andrew Q Nguyen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many serious diseases have a genetic basis which, from an evolutionary point of view, should have been selected against, resulting in very low frequencies. The remarkable sustained prevalence of a number of disease-associated alleles is therefore surprising. We believe that antagonistic pleiotropy, when multiple effects of a gene have opposing effects on fitness (e.g., sickle cell disease), may be more widespread than typically considered. We hypothesize that, rather than being an exception to the rule of genetic disorders, antagonistic pleiotropy may be common.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22151998 PMCID: PMC3254080 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-12-160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Antagonistically pleiotropic disease alleles.
| Deleterious effect (disease) | Gene: variation | Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Increased risk of cancers: ovarian (females), prostate (males). | AR: CAG trinucleotide repeat lengths. | Females: increased fertility via reduced degree of pre-mature ovarian failure, reduced risk of breast cancer. Males: increased number of viable sperm, reduced risk of Kennedy's Disease. |
| Huntington's disease. | HTT: CAG trinucleotide repeat lengths. | Increased fertility, decreased risk of certain cancers. |
| Sickle cell disease. | Hbb: various point mutations. | Protection against malaria in the heterozygous state. |
| Beta-thalassemia. | HB: various point mutations | Protection against malaria in the heterozygous state. |
| Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency. | G6PD: various missense mutations. | Protection against malaria. |
| Cystic fibrosis (CF) | CFTR: missense mutation. | Increased fertility. |
| Increased risk of osteoporosis in old age. | ALOX15: A:G intronic polymorphism. | Reduced risk of osetoporosis in youth. |
These diseases are described in more detail in the text, the presence of an advantage in addition to the deleterious effects of the disease is well-supported by detailed genetic or epidemiological information.
Putative antagonistically pleiotropic disease alleles.
| Disease | Gene; Variation | Putative Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Triosephosphate Isomerase Deficiency | TPI Gene: point mutations. | Reduction in oxidative stress. |
| Tay Sachs | HEXA: missense mutations. | Protection against tuberculosis. |
| Hemachromatosis | HFE Gene: many point mutation. | Better iron absorption, increased resistance to typhoid fever and tuberculosis |
| Phenylketonuria | PKU: missense mutation. | Lower probability of miscarriage |
| Leukemia | PTNP11: various expression level mutations. | Lower probability of hepatocellular carcinoma |
| Schizophrenia | Chromosomal regions 6p22-p24 and 11q21-22. | Higher relative fertility (in unaffected relatives). |
| Cancer | TNFRSF11B Gene; Various Polymorphisms | Increased Bone Density in Females |
These diseases have been proposed to have antagonistic pleiotropic effects in their etiology, but the evidence is suggestive and preliminary.
Figure 1Expected equilibrium frequency of the disease phenotype caused by an overdominant antagonistically pleiotropic allele. Equilibrium frequencies for heterozygous advantages, Sadv, of 0.1%, 1%, 5% and 25% are shown for a range of homozygous deleterious effects, Sdel, ranging from 0% (no deleterious effect) to 100% (allele is lethal or homozygotes are always sterile). Note the Log10 scale on the Y-axis.
Figure 2Expected equilibrium frequency of the disease phenotype caused by an overdominant antagonistically pleiotropic allele. Equilibrium frequencies for homozygous disadvantages, Sdel, of 100% (completely lethal or always causing sterility), 50%, 25% and 10% are shown for a range of heterozygous advantageous effects ranging from 0% (no advantage) to 25% (a moderate, but potentially unrecognized, advantage). Note the Log10 scale on the Y-axis.