| Literature DB >> 28902892 |
Clément Zanolli1, Mathilde Hourset1,2, Rémi Esclassan1,2, Catherine Mollereau1.
Abstract
Environment parameters, diet and genetic factors interact to shape tooth morphostructure. In the human lineage, archaic and modern hominins show differences in dental traits, including enamel thickness, but variability also exists among living populations. Several polymorphisms, in particular in the non-collagenous extracellular matrix proteins of the tooth hard tissues, like enamelin, are involved in dental structure variation and defects and may be associated with dental disorders or susceptibility to caries. To gain insights into the relationships between tooth protein polymorphisms and dental structural morphology and defects, we searched for non-synonymous polymorphisms in tooth proteins from Neanderthal and Denisova hominins. The objective was to identify archaic-specific missense variants that may explain the dental morphostructural variability between extinct and modern humans, and to explore their putative impact on present-day dental phenotypes. Thirteen non-collagenous extracellular matrix proteins specific to hard dental tissues have been selected, searched in the publicly available sequence databases of Neanderthal and Denisova individuals and compared with modern human genome data. A total of 16 non-synonymous polymorphisms were identified in 6 proteins (ameloblastin, amelotin, cementum protein 1, dentin matrix acidic phosphoprotein 1, enamelin and matrix Gla protein). Most of them are encoded by dentin and enamel genes located on chromosome 4, previously reported to show signs of archaic introgression within Africa. Among the variants shared with modern humans, two are ancestral (common with apes) and one is the derived enamelin major variant, T648I (rs7671281), associated with a thinner enamel and specific to the Homo lineage. All the others are specific to Neanderthals and Denisova, and are found at a very low frequency in modern Africans or East and South Asians, suggesting that they may be related to particular dental traits or disease susceptibility in these populations. This modern regional distribution of archaic dental polymorphisms may reflect persistence of archaic variants in some populations and may contribute in part to the geographic dental variations described in modern humans.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28902892 PMCID: PMC5597096 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0183802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Main non-collagenous extracellular matrix proteins present in tooth hard tissues.
| Gene | Protein | Function | Phenotype linked to polymorphism in humans | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | Name | Uniprot Access.N° | ||
| Q9NP70 | Structural constituent of enamel, involved in mineralization | AI [ | ||
| Q99217 | Structural constituent of enamel, involved in mineralization | Hypoplasia, AI [ | ||
| Q99218 | Structural constituent of enamel, involved in mineralization | |||
| Q6UX39 | Structural constituent of enamel, involved in mineralization | Hypomineralization, AI [ | ||
| Q6PRD7 | Structural constituent of cementum | |||
| Q13316 | Structural constituent of dentin | |||
| Q9NZW4 | Structural constituent of dentin, involved in mineralization | DI, DD [ | ||
| Q9NRM1 | Structural constituent of enamel, involved in mineralization | Enamel thickness [ | ||
| Q9Y5K2 | Involved in the maturation of enamel matrix proteins | Hypoplasia, AI [ | ||
| O60882 | Involved in the maturation of tooth matrix proteins | Hypoplasia AI [ | ||
| P08493 | Structural constituent of bone and tooth, negative regulator of mineralization | |||
| A1E959 | Structural constituent of enamel | |||
| Q9NNX1 | Structural constituent of enamel | |||
AI: amelogenesis imperfecta, DD: dentinogenesis dysplasia, DI: dentinogenesis imperfecta
Non-synonymous polymorphisms present in tooth proteins of Neanderthal and Denisova hominins.
| Gorilla | Chimp | Modern humans | Neanderthals | Denisova | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variants identified in archaic hominins | (global worldwide frequency) | Altaï (Russia) | Vindija (Croatia) | Mezmaiskaya (Russia) | El Sidron (Spain) | ||||||
| Vi33.15 | Vi33.16 | Vi33.25 | Vi33.26 | Mez1 | |||||||
| G | G | G | G | G | G | G | G | G | |||
| M | M | M | M | M | M | ||||||
| R | R | R | R | R | R | R | |||||
| A | T | A | A | A | A | A | |||||
| R | R | R | R | ||||||||
| K | E | ||||||||||
| R | R | R | |||||||||
| R | R | R | R | R | R | ||||||
| N | N | N | N | ||||||||
| G | G | G | G | ||||||||
| T | T | T | T | T | T | T | T | T | |||
| R | R | R | R | R | R | ||||||
| T | T | T | |||||||||
| T | T | T | T | T | T | ||||||
| A | A | A | |||||||||
| T | A | ||||||||||
Bold characters indicate the aminoacid and position corresponding to the archaic hominin variant. Empty cell indicates no sequence read available at this position. Yellow: common to archaic hominins; Dark green: specific to Neanderthals; Light green: specific to the Vindija cave; Dark blue: specific to Denisova; Light blue: at least present in Denisova.
Fig 1Geographical distribution of the dental protein variants common to archaic hominins in living people.
The colored amino acid corresponds to the archaic variant. Yellow corresponds to the major allele; blue and green correspond to minor alleles with a proportion out of 1 and 0.1, respectively. The maps were generated in the Geography of Genetic Variants Browser (http://popgen.uchicago.edu/ggv/) [50].
Fig 2Geographical distribution of the dental protein variants specific to Neanderthals in living people.
The colored amino acid corresponds to the archaic variant. Yellow corresponds to the major allele, green, purple and brown correspond to minor alleles with a proportion out of 0.1, 0.001 and 0.0001, respectively. The maps were generated in the Geography of Genetic Variants Browser (http://popgen.uchicago.edu/ggv/) [50].
Fig 3Geographical distribution of dental protein variants A: specific to Denisova, B: at least present in Denisova in living people.
The colored amino acid correspond to the archaic variant. Yellow corresponds to the major allele, blue, green, red and purple corresponds to minor alleles with a proportion out of 1, 0.1, 0.01 and 0.001, respectively. The maps were generated in the Geography of Genetic Variants Browser (http://popgen.uchicago.edu/ggv/) [50].
Fig 4Localization of tooth protein genes in two clusters on chromosome 4.