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Natural selection for the Duffy-null allele in the recently admixed people of Madagascar
Author(s) -
Jason A. Hodgson,
Joseph K. Pickrell,
Laurel N. Pearson,
Ellen E. Quillen,
António Prista,
Jorge Rocha,
Himla Soodyall,
Mark D. Shriver,
George H. Perry
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society b biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.342
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1471-2954
pISSN - 0962-8452
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.2014.0930
Subject(s) - biology , natural selection , allele , null allele , genetics , population , malaria , evolutionary biology , allele frequency , genetic variation , null model , genetic diversity , fixation (population genetics) , mainland , population genetics , gene , ecology , demography , sociology , immunology
While gene flow between distantly related populations is increasingly recognized as a potentially important source of adaptive genetic variation for humans, fully characterized examples are rare. In addition, the role that natural selection for resistance to vivax malaria may have played in the extreme distribution of the protective Duffy-null allele, which is nearly completely fixed in mainland sub-Saharan Africa and absent elsewhere, is controversial. We address both these issues by investigating the evolution of the Duffy-null allele in the Malagasy, a recently admixed population with major ancestry components from both East Asia and mainland sub-Saharan Africa. We used genome-wide genetic data and extensive computer simulations to show that the high frequency of the Duffy-null allele in Madagascar can only be explained in the absence of positive natural selection under extreme demographic scenarios involving high genetic drift. However, the observed genomic single nucleotide polymorphism diversity in the Malagasy is incompatible with such extreme demographic scenarios, indicating that positive selection for the Duffy-null allele best explains the high frequency of the allele in Madagascar. We estimate the selection coefficient to be 0.066. Because vivax malaria is endemic to Madagascar, this result supports the hypothesis that malaria resistance drove fixation of the Duffy-null allele in mainland sub-Saharan Africa.

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