Sweeney Carolyn G, Rando Juliette M, Panas Helen N, Miller Gregory M, Platt Donna M, Vallender Eric J
Division of Neuroscience, New England Primate Research Center, Harvard Medical School, Southborough, MA.
Mol Biol Evol. 2017 Jul 1;34(7):1629-1643. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msx105.
The mu opioid receptor is involved in many natural processes including stress response, pleasure, and pain. Mutations in the gene also have been associated with opiate and alcohol addictions as well as with responsivity to medication targeting these disorders. Two common and mutually exclusive polymorphisms have been identified in humans, A118G (N40D), found commonly in non-African populations, and C17T (V6A), found almost exclusively in African populations. Although A118G has been studied extensively for associations and in functional assays, C17T is much less well understood. In addition to a parallel polymorphism previously identified in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta), C77G (P26R), resequencing in additional non-human primate species identifies further common variation: C140T (P47L) in cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis), G55C (D19H) in vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus aethiops sabeus), A111T (L37F) in marmosets (Callithrix jacchus), and C55T (P19S) in squirrel monkeys (Saimiri boliviensis peruviensis). Functional effects on downstream signaling are observed for each of these variants following treatment with the endogenous agonist β-endorphin and the exogenous agonists morphine, DAMGO ([d-Ala2, N-Me-Phe4, Gly5-ol]-enkephalin), and fentanyl. In addition to demonstrating the importance of functional equivalency in reference to population variation for minority health, this also shows how common evolutionary pressures have produced similar phenotypes across species, suggesting a shared response to environmental needs and perhaps elucidating the mechanism by which these organism-environment interactions are mediated physiologically and molecularly. These studies set the stage for future investigations of shared functional polymorphisms across species as a new genetic tool for translational research.
μ阿片受体参与许多自然过程,包括应激反应、愉悦感和疼痛。该基因的突变还与阿片类药物和酒精成瘾以及针对这些疾病的药物反应性有关。在人类中已鉴定出两种常见且相互排斥的多态性,A118G(N40D),常见于非非洲人群中;C17T(V6A),几乎仅在非洲人群中发现。尽管A118G已在关联研究和功能测定中得到广泛研究,但对C17T的了解要少得多。除了先前在恒河猴(猕猴)中鉴定出的平行多态性C77G(P26R)外,对其他非人类灵长类物种的重测序还发现了更多常见变异:食蟹猴(食蟹猕猴)中的C140T(P47L)、绿猴(埃塞俄比亚绿猴)中的G55C(D19H)、狨猴(狨)中的A111T(L37F)以及松鼠猴(秘鲁松鼠猴)中的C55T(P19S)。在用内源性激动剂β-内啡肽和外源性激动剂吗啡、DAMGO([d-Ala2,N-Me-Phe4,Gly5-ol]-脑啡肽)和芬太尼处理后,观察到这些变体对下游信号传导的功能影响。这不仅证明了在少数群体健康方面,功能等效性相对于群体变异的重要性,还表明了常见的进化压力如何在不同物种中产生相似的表型,暗示了对环境需求的共同反应,也许还阐明了这些生物体与环境相互作用在生理和分子水平上的介导机制。这些研究为未来跨物种共享功能多态性的研究奠定了基础,作为转化研究的一种新的遗传工具。