Wooding Stephen, Kim Un-Kyung, Bamshad Michael J, Larsen Jennifer, Jorde Lynn B, Drayna Dennis
Department of Human Genetics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City 84112-5330, USA.
Am J Hum Genet. 2004 Apr;74(4):637-46. doi: 10.1086/383092. Epub 2004 Mar 2.
The ability to taste phenylthiocarbamide (PTC) is a classic phenotype that has long been known to vary in human populations. This phenotype is of genetic, epidemiologic, and evolutionary interest because the ability to taste PTC is correlated with the ability to taste other bitter substances, many of which are toxic. Thus, variation in PTC perception may reflect variation in dietary preferences throughout human history and could correlate with susceptibility to diet-related diseases in modern populations. To test R. A. Fisher's long-standing hypothesis that variability in PTC perception has been maintained by balancing natural selection, we examined patterns of DNA sequence variation in the recently identified PTC gene, which accounts for up to 85% of phenotypic variance in the trait. We analyzed the entire coding region of PTC (1,002 bp) in a sample of 330 chromosomes collected from African (n=62), Asian (n=138), European (n=110), and North American (n=20) populations by use of new statistical tests for natural selection that take into account the potentially confounding effects of human population growth. Two intermediate-frequency haplotypes corresponding to "taster" and "nontaster" phenotypes were found. These haplotypes had similar frequencies across Africa, Asia, and Europe. Genetic differentiation between the continental population samples was low (FST=0.056) in comparison with estimates based on other genes. In addition, Tajima's D and Fu and Li's D and F statistics demonstrated a significant deviation from neutrality because of an excess of intermediate-frequency variants when human population growth was taken into account (P<.01). These results combine to suggest that balancing natural selection has acted to maintain "taster" and "nontaster" alleles at the PTC locus in humans.
尝味苯硫脲(PTC)的能力是一种经典的表型,长期以来人们都知道它在人类群体中存在差异。这种表型具有遗传学、流行病学和进化方面的研究价值,因为尝味PTC的能力与尝味其他苦味物质的能力相关,其中许多苦味物质是有毒的。因此,PTC感知的差异可能反映了人类历史上饮食偏好的差异,并且可能与现代人群中与饮食相关疾病的易感性相关。为了检验R.A.费希尔长期以来的假说,即PTC感知的变异性是通过平衡自然选择来维持的,我们研究了最近鉴定出的PTC基因中的DNA序列变异模式,该基因占该性状表型变异的85%。我们使用考虑了人类群体增长潜在混杂效应的新的自然选择统计检验方法,分析了从非洲(n = 62)、亚洲(n = 138)、欧洲(n = 110)和北美(n = 20)人群中收集的330条染色体样本中PTC的整个编码区(1002 bp)。发现了两种对应于“尝味者”和“非尝味者”表型的中频单倍型。这些单倍型在非洲、亚洲和欧洲的频率相似。与基于其他基因的估计相比,大陆群体样本之间的遗传分化较低(FST = 0.056)。此外,当考虑到人类群体增长时,Tajima's D以及Fu和Li's D和F统计量显示出显著偏离中性,因为中频变异过多(P < 0.01)。这些结果共同表明,平衡自然选择在人类PTC基因座上维持了“尝味者”和“非尝味者”等位基因。