| Literature DB >> 36161951 |
Zhaohui Yang1,2,3, Caijuan Bai4, Youwei Pu2,3, Qinghong Kong5, Yongbo Guo1,6,7, Xuyang Liu3, Qi Zhao3, Zhichao Qiu3, Wangshan Zheng1,6,7, Yaoxi He1,6, Yihan Lin3, Lian Deng8, Chao Zhang8, Shuhua Xu6,8, Yi Peng1, Kun Xiang1, Xiaoming Zhang1, Chaoying Cui4, Yongyue Pan4, Jingxue Xin9, Yong Wang9, Shiming Liu10, Liangbang Wang10, Hengliang Guo11, Zhenzhen Feng12, Shaobo Wang3, Hong Shi3, Binghua Jiang2, Tianyi Wu10, Xuebin Qi1,6, Bing Su1,6.
Abstract
Strong ultraviolet (UV) radiation at high altitude imposes a serious selective pressure, which may induce skin pigmentation adaptation of indigenous populations. We conducted skin pigmentation phenotyping and genome-wide analysis of Tibetans in order to understand the underlying mechanism of adaptation to UV radiation. We observe that Tibetans have darker baseline skin color compared with lowland Han Chinese, as well as an improved tanning ability, suggesting a two-level adaptation to boost their melanin production. A genome-wide search for the responsible genes identifies GNPAT showing strong signals of positive selection in Tibetans. An enhancer mutation (rs75356281) located in GNPAT intron 2 is enriched in Tibetans (58%) but rare in other world populations (0 to 18%). The adaptive allele of rs75356281 is associated with darker skin in Tibetans and, under UVB treatment, it displays higher enhancer activities compared with the wild-type allele in in vitro luciferase assays. Transcriptome analyses of gene-edited cells clearly show that with UVB treatment, the adaptive variant of GNPAT promotes melanin synthesis, likely through the interactions of CAT and ACAA1 in peroxisomes with other pigmentation genes, and they act synergistically, leading to an improved tanning ability in Tibetans for UV protection.Entities:
Keywords: Tibetan; UV radiation; adaptation; high altitude; pigmentation
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36161951 PMCID: PMC9552612 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2200421119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779