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A positively selected FBN1 missense variant reduces height in Peruvian individuals.

Nature (2020-06-06)
Samira Asgari, Yang Luo, Ali Akbari, Gillian M Belbin, Xinyi Li, Daniel N Harris, Martin Selig, Eric Bartell, Roger Calderon, Kamil Slowikowski, Carmen Contreras, Rosa Yataco, Jerome T Galea, Judith Jimenez, Julia M Coit, Chandel Farroñay, Rosalynn M Nazarian, Timothy D O'Connor, Harry C Dietz, Joel N Hirschhorn, Heinner Guio, Leonid Lecca, Eimear E Kenny, Esther E Freeman, Megan B Murray, Soumya Raychaudhuri
RESUMEN

On average, Peruvian individuals are among the shortest in the world1. Here we show that Native American ancestry is associated with reduced height in an ethnically diverse group of Peruvian individuals, and identify a population-specific, missense variant in the FBN1 gene (E1297G) that is significantly associated with lower height. Each copy of the minor allele (frequency of 4.7%) reduces height by 2.2 cm (4.4 cm in homozygous individuals). To our knowledge, this is the largest effect size known for a common height-associated variant. FBN1 encodes the extracellular matrix protein fibrillin 1, which is a major structural component of microfibrils. We observed less densely packed fibrillin-1-rich microfibrils with irregular edges in the skin of individuals who were homozygous for G1297 compared with individuals who were homozygous for E1297. Moreover, we show that the E1297G locus is under positive selection in non-African populations, and that the E1297 variant shows subtle evidence of positive selection specifically within the Peruvian population. This variant is also significantly more frequent in coastal Peruvian populations than in populations from the Andes or the Amazon, which suggests that short stature might be the result of adaptation to factors that are associated with the coastal environment in Peru.

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