| Literature DB >> 31940934 |
Keolu Fox1,2, Kartik Lakshmi Rallapalli3, Alexis C Komor3.
Abstract
Appropriate empirical-based evidence and detailed theoretical considerations should be used for evolutionary explanations of phenotypic variation observed in the field of human population genetics (especially Indigenous populations). Investigators within the population genetics community frequently overlook the importance of these criteria when associating observed phenotypic variation with evolutionary explanations. A functional investigation of population-specific variation using cutting-edge genome editing tools has the potential to empower the population genetics community by holding "just-so" evolutionary explanations accountable. Here, we detail currently available precision genome editing tools and methods, with a particular emphasis on base editing, that can be applied to functionally investigate population-specific point mutations. We use the recent identification of thrifty mutations in the CREBRF gene as an example of the current dire need for an alliance between the fields of population genetics and genome editing.Entities:
Keywords: base editing; functional genomics; population genetics; signatures of natural selection
Year: 2020 PMID: 31940934 PMCID: PMC7016644 DOI: 10.3390/genes11010088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Signatures of natural selection. Examples of human local adaptations, each labeled by the phenotype and/or selection pressure, and the genetic loci under selection.
Figure 2Genome editing tool kit. Currently available tools for point mutation introduction are shown, with a A•T to G•C shown as an example. (A) Double-stranded DNA break (DSB) introduction by RNA-guided Cas enzymes. The Cas endonuclease is programmed to bind and cut at a genomic locus of the researcher’s choosing by the sequence of the gRNA. Following DSB introduction, two repair pathways compete for resolution of the DSB, resulting in both indel formation and single nucleotide variant (SNV) introduction. (B) Base editors facilitate SNV introduction by chemically modifying a target DNA nucleobase into a uracil or inosine (inosine shown as an example). These non-canonical DNA bases are then processed by the cell, resulting in SNV introduction. (C) Prime editors use a 3′ extension on the gRNA as a template for a reverse transcriptase. Following the introduction of this sequence directly into the genome (light purple), flap resolution by cellular repair factors will remove the original genomic sequence to yield a mismatch, which is then processed by cellular repair factors to yield the SNV of interest.