Beta2-adrenergic receptor allele frequencies in the Quechua, a high altitude native population
The beta2-adrenergic receptor is involved in the control of numerous physiological processes and, as the primary catecholamine receptor in the lungs, is of particular importance in the regulation of pulmonary function. There are several polymorphic loci in the beta2-adrenergic receptor gene that hav...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annals of human genetics 2000-03, Vol.64 (2), p.135-143 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The beta2-adrenergic receptor is involved in the control of numerous physiological processes and,
as the primary catecholamine receptor in the lungs, is of particular importance in the regulation of
pulmonary function. There are several polymorphic loci in the beta2-adrenergic receptor gene that
have alleles that alter receptor function, including two (A/G46, G/C79) that increase agonist
sensitivity. As such a phenotype may increase vaso and bronchial dilation, thereby facilitating air
and blood flow through the lungs, we hypothesized that selection may have favoured these alleles in
high altitude populations as part of an adaptive strategy to deal with the hypoxic conditions
characteristic of such environments. We tested this hypothesis by determining the allele frequencies
for these two polymorphisms, as well one additional missense mutation (C/T491) and two silent
mutations (G/A252 and C/A523) in 63 Quechua speaking natives from communities located between
3200 and 4200 m on the Peruvian altiplano. These frequencies were compared with those of two
lowland populations, one native American (Na-Dene from the west coast of Canada) and one
Caucasian of Western European descent. The Quechua manifest many of the pulmonary
characteristics of high altitude populations and differences in allele frequencies between the Quechua
and lowlanders could be indicative of a selective advantage conferred by certain genotypes in high
altitude environments. Allele frequencies varied between populations at some loci and patterns of
linkage disequilibrium differed between the old-world and new-world samples; however, as these
populations are not closely related, significant variation would be expected due to stochastic effects
alone. Neither of the alleles associated with increased receptor sensitivity (A46, G79) was significantly
over-represented in the Quechua compared with either lowland group. The Quechua were
monomorphic for the C allele at base 79. This variant has been associated with body mass index;
however no clearly defined metabolic phenotype has been established. In addition, we sequenced the
coding region of the gene in three unrelated Quechua to determine if there were any other
polymorphisms common in this population. None were detected. |
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ISSN: | 0003-4800 1469-1809 |
DOI: | 10.1046/j.1469-1809.2000.6420135.x |