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1.
Nature ; 538(7624): 201-206, 2016 Oct 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27654912

RESUMEN

Here we report the Simons Genome Diversity Project data set: high quality genomes from 300 individuals from 142 diverse populations. These genomes include at least 5.8 million base pairs that are not present in the human reference genome. Our analysis reveals key features of the landscape of human genome variation, including that the rate of accumulation of mutations has accelerated by about 5% in non-Africans compared to Africans since divergence. We show that the ancestors of some pairs of present-day human populations were substantially separated by 100,000 years ago, well before the archaeologically attested onset of behavioural modernity. We also demonstrate that indigenous Australians, New Guineans and Andamanese do not derive substantial ancestry from an early dispersal of modern humans; instead, their modern human ancestry is consistent with coming from the same source as that of other non-Africans.


Asunto(s)
Variación Genética/genética , Genoma Humano/genética , Genómica , Tasa de Mutación , Filogenia , Grupos Raciales/genética , Animales , Australia , Población Negra/genética , Conjuntos de Datos como Asunto , Genética de Población , Historia Antigua , Migración Humana/historia , Humanos , Nativos de Hawái y Otras Islas del Pacífico/genética , Hombre de Neandertal/genética , Nueva Guinea , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN , Especificidad de la Especie , Factores de Tiempo
2.
Am J Hum Biol ; 34(4): e23670, 2022 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34424596

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: Connecting traits to biological pathways and genes relies on stable observations. Researchers typically determine traits once, expecting careful study protocols to yield measurements free of noise. This report examines that expectation with test-retest repeatability analyses for traits used regularly in research on adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia, often in settings without climate control. METHODS: Two hundred ninety-one ethnic Tibetan women residing from 3500 to 4200 m in Upper Mustang District, Nepal, provided three observations of hemoglobin concentration, percent of oxygen saturation of hemoglobin, and pulse by noninvasive pulse oximetry under conditions designed to minimize environmental noise. RESULTS: High-intraclass correlation coefficients and low within-subject coefficients of variation reflected consistent measurements. Percent of oxygen saturation had the highest intraclass correlation coefficient and the smallest within-subject coefficient of variability; measurement noise occurred mainly in the lower values. Hemoglobin concentration and pulse presented slightly higher within-subject coefficients of variation; measurement noise occurred across the range of values. The women had performed the same measurements 7 years earlier using the same devices and protocol. The sample means and SD observed across 7 years differed little. Hemoglobin concentration increased substantially after menopause. CONCLUSIONS: Analyzing repeatability features of traits may improve our interpretation of statistical analyses and detection of variation from measurement or biology. The high levels of measurement repeatability and biological stability support the continued use of these robust traits for investigating human adaptation in this altitude range.


Asunto(s)
Mal de Altura , Altitud , Adaptación Fisiológica/genética , Femenino , Hemoglobinas/metabolismo , Humanos , Oximetría , Oxígeno/análisis , Tibet
3.
PLoS Genet ; 14(9): e1007650, 2018 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30188897

RESUMEN

Adaptive evolution in humans has rarely been characterized for its whole set of components, i.e. selective pressure, adaptive phenotype, beneficial alleles and realized fitness differential. We combined approaches for detecting polygenic adaptations and for mapping the genetic bases of physiological and fertility phenotypes in approximately 1000 indigenous ethnically Tibetan women from Nepal, adapted to high altitude. The results of genome-wide association analyses and tests for polygenic adaptations showed evidence of positive selection for alleles associated with more pregnancies and live births and evidence of negative selection for those associated with higher offspring mortality. Lower hemoglobin level did not show clear evidence for polygenic adaptation, despite its strong association with an EPAS1 haplotype carrying selective sweep signals.


Asunto(s)
Aclimatación/genética , Pueblo Asiatico/genética , Haplotipos/fisiología , Herencia Multifactorial/fisiología , Selección Genética/fisiología , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Altitud , Factores de Transcripción con Motivo Hélice-Asa-Hélice Básico/genética , Femenino , Estudio de Asociación del Genoma Completo , Hemoglobinas/análisis , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad , Nepal , Tibet
4.
Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol ; 312(2): L172-L177, 2017 Feb 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27979860

RESUMEN

Elevation of hemoglobin concentration, a common adaptive response to high-altitude hypoxia, occurs among Oromo but is dampened among Amhara highlanders of East Africa. We hypothesized that Amhara highlanders offset their smaller hemoglobin response with a vascular response. We tested this by comparing Amhara and Oromo highlanders at 3,700 and 4,000 m to their lowland counterparts at 1,200 and 1,700 m. To evaluate vascular responses, we assessed urinary levels of nitrate (NO3-) as a readout of production of the vasodilator nitric oxide and its downstream signal transducer cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), along with diastolic blood pressure as an indicator of vasomotor tone. To evaluate hematological responses, we measured hemoglobin and percent oxygen saturation of hemoglobin. Amhara highlanders, but not Oromo, had higher NO3- and cGMP compared with their lowland counterparts. NO3- directly correlated with cGMP (Amhara R2 = 0.25, P < 0.0001; Oromo R2 = 0.30, P < 0.0001). Consistent with higher levels of NO3- and cGMP, diastolic blood pressure was lower in Amhara highlanders. Both highland samples had apparent left shift in oxyhemoglobin saturation characteristics and maintained total oxyhemoglobin content similar to their lowland counterparts. However, deoxyhemoglobin levels were significantly higher, much more so among Oromo than Amhara. In conclusion, the Amhara balance minimally elevated hemoglobin with vasodilatory response to environmental hypoxia, whereas Oromo rely mainly on elevated hemoglobin response. These results point to different combinations of adaptive responses in genetically similar East African highlanders.


Asunto(s)
Mal de Altura/sangre , Altitud , Vasos Sanguíneos/fisiopatología , Hemoglobinas/metabolismo , Hipoxia/sangre , Adaptación Fisiológica , África Oriental , Mal de Altura/complicaciones , Mal de Altura/fisiopatología , Mal de Altura/orina , Presión Sanguínea , GMP Cíclico/metabolismo , Demografía , Diástole , Etnicidad , Humanos , Hipoxia/complicaciones , Hipoxia/fisiopatología , Hipoxia/orina , Nitratos/orina , Oxihemoglobinas/metabolismo
5.
Blood ; 135(13): 984-985, 2020 03 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32219350
6.
Am J Hum Biol ; 29(6)2017 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28726295

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: People living at high altitude experience unavoidable low oxygen levels (hypoxia). While acute hypoxia causes an increase in oxidative stress and damage despite higher antioxidant activity, the consequences of chronic hypoxia are poorly understood. The aim of the present study is to assess antioxidant activity and oxidative damage in high-altitude natives and upward migrants. METHODS: Individuals from two indigenous high-altitude populations (Amhara, n = 39), (Sherpa, n = 34), one multigenerational high-altitude population (Oromo, n = 42), one upward migrant population (Nepali, n = 12), and two low-altitude reference populations (Amhara, n = 29; Oromo, n = 18) provided plasma for measurement of superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity as a marker of antioxidant capacity, and urine for measurement of 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) as a marker of DNA oxidative damage. RESULTS: High-altitude Amhara and Sherpa had the highest SOD activity, while highland Oromo and Nepalis had the lowest among high-altitude populations. High-altitude Amhara had the lowest DNA damage, Sherpa intermediate levels, and high-altitude Oromo had the highest. CONCLUSIONS: High-altitude residence alone does not associate with high antioxidant defenses; residence length appears to be influential. The single-generation upward migrant sample had the lowest defense and nearly the highest DNA damage. The two high-altitude resident samples with millennia of residence had higher defenses than the two with multiple or single generations of residence.


Asunto(s)
Altitud , Antioxidantes/metabolismo , Estrés Oxidativo , Adaptación Fisiológica , Adulto , Etiopía , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Nepal , Adulto Joven
7.
Matern Child Health J ; 20(12): 2437-2450, 2016 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27167869

RESUMEN

Objectives Whether in metropoles or remote mountain communities, the availability and adoption of contraceptive technologies prompt serious and wide-ranging biological, social, and political-economic questions. The potential shifts in women's capacities to create spaces between pregnancies or to prevent future pregnancies have profound and often positive biological, demographic, and socioeconomic implications. Less acknowledged, however, are the ambivalences that women experience around contraception use-vacillations between moral frameworks, generational difference, and gendered forms of labor that have implications well beyond the boundaries of an individual's reproductive biology. This paper hones in on contraceptive use of culturally Tibetan women in two regions of highland Nepal whose reproductive lives occurred from 1943 to 2012. Methods We describe the experiences of the 296 women (out of a study of more than 1000 women's reproductive histories) who used contraception, and under what circumstances, examining socioeconomic, geographic, and age differences as well as points of access and patterns of use. We also provide a longitudinal perspective on fertility. Results Our results relate contraception usage to fertility decline, as well as to differences in access between the two communities of women. Conclusions We argue that despite seemingly similar social ecologies of these two study sites-including stated reasons for the adoption of contraception and expressed ambivalence around its use, some of which are linked to moral and cosmological understandings that emerge from Buddhism-the dynamics of contraception uptake in these two regions are distinct, as are, therefore, patterns of fertility transition.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Anticonceptiva/etnología , Anticoncepción/estadística & datos numéricos , Servicios de Planificación Familiar/estadística & datos numéricos , Fertilidad , Conocimientos, Actitudes y Práctica en Salud/etnología , Cambio Social , Adulto , Cultura , Servicios de Planificación Familiar/métodos , Femenino , Grupos Focales , Humanos , Nepal , Factores Socioeconómicos , Tibet
9.
PLoS Genet ; 8(12): e1003110, 2012.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23236293

RESUMEN

Although hypoxia is a major stress on physiological processes, several human populations have survived for millennia at high altitudes, suggesting that they have adapted to hypoxic conditions. This hypothesis was recently corroborated by studies of Tibetan highlanders, which showed that polymorphisms in candidate genes show signatures of natural selection as well as well-replicated association signals for variation in hemoglobin levels. We extended genomic analysis to two Ethiopian ethnic groups: Amhara and Oromo. For each ethnic group, we sampled low and high altitude residents, thus allowing genetic and phenotypic comparisons across altitudes and across ethnic groups. Genome-wide SNP genotype data were collected in these samples by using Illumina arrays. We find that variants associated with hemoglobin variation among Tibetans or other variants at the same loci do not influence the trait in Ethiopians. However, in the Amhara, SNP rs10803083 is associated with hemoglobin levels at genome-wide levels of significance. No significant genotype association was observed for oxygen saturation levels in either ethnic group. Approaches based on allele frequency divergence did not detect outliers in candidate hypoxia genes, but the most differentiated variants between high- and lowlanders have a clear role in pathogen defense. Interestingly, a significant excess of allele frequency divergence was consistently detected for genes involved in cell cycle control and DNA damage and repair, thus pointing to new pathways for high altitude adaptations. Finally, a comparison of CpG methylation levels between high- and lowlanders found several significant signals at individual genes in the Oromo.


Asunto(s)
Adaptación Fisiológica , Estudio de Asociación del Genoma Completo , Hemoglobinas/genética , Hipoxia , Aclimatación/genética , Altitud , Mal de Altura/genética , Islas de CpG/genética , Metilación de ADN/genética , Etiopía , Etnicidad/genética , Frecuencia de los Genes , Humanos , Hipoxia/genética , Hipoxia/fisiopatología , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Selección Genética
10.
Am J Hum Biol ; 26(5): 577-89, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24665016

RESUMEN

The importance of women's reproductive histories for scientific questions mandates rigor in collecting data. Unfortunately, few studies say much about how histories were constructed and validated. The aim of this report, therefore, is to illustrate the elements of a rigorous system of data collection. It focuses particularly on potential sources of inaccuracy in collecting reproductive histories and on options for avoiding them and evaluating the results. A few studies are exemplary in their description of methods of data collection and evaluation of data quality because they clearly address the main issues of ascertaining whether or not an event occurred and, if so, its timing. Fundamental variables such as chronological age, live birth, or marriage may have different meanings in different cultures or communities. Techniques start with asking the appropriate people meaningful questions that they can and will answer, in suitable settings, about themselves and others. Good community relations and well-trained, aware interviewers who check and cross-check, are fundamental. A range of techniques estimate age, date events, and optimize the value of imperfect data. Robust data collection procedures rely on skillful and knowledgeable interviewing. Reliability can be improved, evaluated and explained. Researchers can plan to implement robust data collection procedures and should assess their data for the scientific community to raise confidence in reproductive history data.


Asunto(s)
Recolección de Datos , Historia Reproductiva , Femenino , Humanos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Proyectos de Investigación
11.
PLoS Genet ; 7(4): e1001375, 2011 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21533023

RESUMEN

Humans inhabit a remarkably diverse range of environments, and adaptation through natural selection has likely played a central role in the capacity to survive and thrive in extreme climates. Unlike numerous studies that used only population genetic data to search for evidence of selection, here we scan the human genome for selection signals by identifying the SNPs with the strongest correlations between allele frequencies and climate across 61 worldwide populations. We find a striking enrichment of genic and nonsynonymous SNPs relative to non-genic SNPs among those that are strongly correlated with these climate variables. Among the most extreme signals, several overlap with those from GWAS, including SNPs associated with pigmentation and autoimmune diseases. Further, we find an enrichment of strong signals in gene sets related to UV radiation, infection and immunity, and cancer. Our results imply that adaptations to climate shaped the spatial distribution of variation in humans.


Asunto(s)
Clima , Genética de Población , Genoma Humano , Estudio de Asociación del Genoma Completo , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Selección Genética , Aclimatación , Frecuencia de los Genes , Humanos , Temperatura , Rayos Ultravioleta
13.
Am J Hum Biol ; 25(2): 141-7, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23349118

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: This report presents a perspective on the broad research trends in the biology of human populations at high-altitude and their contributions to the improved understanding of evolution and adaptation. A focus is on the research that has occurred over the past 50 years of anthropological fieldwork on the Andean, Tibetan, and, to a lesser extent, the East African plateaus. METHODS: With an emphasis on fieldwork studies, this report presents and illustrates major concepts and research designs in published high-altitude studies. RESULTS: Early use of a single population-multiple stress research design focused on Andean Quechua, sometimes in comparison with European or admixed Andean-European samples. That design identified physical and sociocultural environmental factors including cold and under nutrition as well as high-altitude hypobaric hypoxia. Researchers accumulated evidence supporting the hypothesis of four modes of adaptation to a complex Andean highland environment: cultural, acclimatization, developmental, and genetic. The discovery that Andean biological patterns were not replicated among Tibetan highlanders stimulated research on the extent and origins of the contrasts. It also shifted emphasis to a multiple population - single stress study design. The discovery of oxygen-homeostasis-associated genetic loci and traits in all multicellular animals has transformed high-altitude research. Paradoxically, genomic analyses identifying the pertinent biological pathways are likely to return interest to environmental factors other than hypoxia. CONCLUSIONS: Details of the proximate mechanisms, the biochemical, and physiological processes underlying the three modes of biological adaptation are accumulating. Better understanding of oxygen-homeostasis processes leads to questions about crossadaptation with other environmental factors. The particulars of the ultimate mechanisms, the evolutionary, and microevolutionary history underlying the population differences are also emerging. For example, similar hemoglobin phenotypes among Tibetan and Ethiopian Amhara highlanders associate with different genetic loci and the variants at those loci are present in most populations regardless of altitude. Continuing fieldwork is urgent because modernization and migration are changing the traditional ways of life and patterns of exposure to the environment among highlanders everywhere.


Asunto(s)
Aclimatación , Evolución Biológica , Oxígeno/metabolismo , Adaptación Fisiológica , Altitud , Frío , Humanos , Proyectos de Investigación
14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 107(25): 11459-64, 2010 Jun 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20534544

RESUMEN

By impairing both function and survival, the severe reduction in oxygen availability associated with high-altitude environments is likely to act as an agent of natural selection. We used genomic and candidate gene approaches to search for evidence of such genetic selection. First, a genome-wide allelic differentiation scan (GWADS) comparing indigenous highlanders of the Tibetan Plateau (3,200-3,500 m) with closely related lowland Han revealed a genome-wide significant divergence across eight SNPs located near EPAS1. This gene encodes the transcription factor HIF2alpha, which stimulates production of red blood cells and thus increases the concentration of hemoglobin in blood. Second, in a separate cohort of Tibetans residing at 4,200 m, we identified 31 EPAS1 SNPs in high linkage disequilibrium that correlated significantly with hemoglobin concentration. The sex-adjusted hemoglobin concentration was, on average, 0.8 g/dL lower in the major allele homozygotes compared with the heterozygotes. These findings were replicated in a third cohort of Tibetans residing at 4,300 m. The alleles associating with lower hemoglobin concentrations were correlated with the signal from the GWADS study and were observed at greatly elevated frequencies in the Tibetan cohorts compared with the Han. High hemoglobin concentrations are a cardinal feature of chronic mountain sickness offering one plausible mechanism for selection. Alternatively, as EPAS1 is pleiotropic in its effects, selection may have operated on some other aspect of the phenotype. Whichever of these explanations is correct, the evidence for genetic selection at the EPAS1 locus from the GWADS study is supported by the replicated studies associating function with the allelic variants.


Asunto(s)
Alelos , Mal de Altura/genética , Altitud , Factores de Transcripción con Motivo Hélice-Asa-Hélice Básico/metabolismo , Factores de Transcripción con Motivo Hélice-Asa-Hélice Básico/fisiología , Hemoglobinas/metabolismo , Selección Genética , Variación Genética , Genoma Humano , Homocigoto , Humanos , Hipoxia , Desequilibrio de Ligamiento , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Tibet
15.
Front Physiol ; 13: 885295, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36035495

RESUMEN

The ability to respond rapidly to changes in oxygen tension is critical for many forms of life. Challenges to oxygen homeostasis, specifically in the contexts of evolutionary biology and biomedicine, provide important insights into mechanisms of hypoxia adaptation and tolerance. Here we synthesize findings across varying time domains of hypoxia in terms of oxygen delivery, ranging from early animal to modern human evolution and examine the potential impacts of environmental and clinical challenges through emerging multi-omics approaches. We discuss how diverse animal species have adapted to hypoxic environments, how humans vary in their responses to hypoxia (i.e., in the context of high-altitude exposure, cardiopulmonary disease, and sleep apnea), and how findings from each of these fields inform the other and lead to promising new directions in basic and clinical hypoxia research.

16.
Am J Hum Biol ; 23(2): 168-76, 2011.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21319245

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: Pulmonary arterioles respond to hypoxia with constriction that raises vascular resistance and pulmonary artery blood pressure. The response is sustained indefinitely by the chronic hypoxia of high-altitude residence among highlanders of European and Andean descent, but not Tibetans. The objective of this study was to identify the consequences of lifelong hypoxia exposure for the pulmonary vasculature among Amhara high-altitude natives from Ethiopia. METHODS: A three-way static group comparison tested for the effect of Amhara ancestry and high residence altitude on pulmonary hemodynamics measured using echocardiography in samples of 76 healthy adult Amhara lifelong residents at 3700 m, 54 Amhara lifelong residents at 1200 m, and 46 U.S. low-altitude residents at 282 m. RESULTS: Amhara at 3700 m had average Doppler-estimated pulmonary artery systolic pressure (tricuspid regurgitant gradient) of 27.9 ± 8.4 (SD) mm Hg as compared with 21.9 ± 4.0 among Amhara at low altitude and 16.5 ± 3.6 in the U.S. low-altitude reference sample. However, there was no residence altitude effect on pulmonary blood flow or vascular resistance. Amhara ancestry was associated with greater pulmonary artery systolic pressure and pulmonary blood flow, yet lower pulmonary vascular resistance. CONCLUSIONS: The Amhara at 3700 m had elevated pulmonary artery pressure, but without the elevated pulmonary vascular resistance characteristic of the classic model of the response to long-term hypoxia by the pulmonary vasculature. The elevated pressure among Amhara may be a consequence of high pulmonary blood flow regardless of altitude and represent a newly identified pattern of response.


Asunto(s)
Altitud , Presión Sanguínea , Arteria Pulmonar/metabolismo , Adolescente , Adulto , Etiopía , Etnicidad , Femenino , Ventrículos Cardíacos/anatomía & histología , Hemodinámica , Humanos , Hipoxia , Pulmón/irrigación sanguínea , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Nitratos/orina , Nitritos/orina , Peptidil-Dipeptidasa A/genética , Peptidil-Dipeptidasa A/metabolismo , Estados Unidos , Resistencia Vascular , Adulto Joven
19.
Am J Hum Biol ; 21(6): 762-8, 2009.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19367574

RESUMEN

Testosterone (T) plays a key role in the increase and maintenance of muscle mass and bone density in adult men. Life history theory predicts that environmental stress may prompt a reallocation of such investments to those functions critical to survival. We tested this hypothesis in two studies of rural Bolivian adult men by comparing free T levels and circadian rhythms during late winter, which is especially severe, to those in less arduous seasons. For each pair of salivary T(AM)/T(PM) samples (collected in a approximately 12-h period), circadian rhythm was considered classic (C(CLASSIC)) if T(AM) > 110%T(PM), reverse (C(REVERSE)) if T(PM) > 110%T(AM), and flat (C(FLAT)) otherwise. We tested the hypotheses that mean T(AM) > mean T(PM) and that mean T(LW) < mean T(OTHER) (LW = late winter, OTHER = other seasons). In Study A, of 115 T(PM)-T(AM) pairs, 51% = C(CLASSIC), 39% = C(REVERSE), 10% = C(FLAT); in Study B, of 184 T(AM)-T(PM) pairs, 55% = C(CLASSIC), 33% = C(REVERSE), 12% = C(FLAT). Based on fitting linear mixed models, in both studies T(OTHER-AM) > T(OTHER-PM) (A: P = 0.035, B: P = 0.0005) and T(OTHER-AM) > T(LW-AM) (A: P = 0.054, B: P = 0.007); T(PM) did not vary seasonally, and T diurnality was not significant during late winter. T diurnality varied substantially between days within an individual, between individuals and between seasons, but neither T levels nor diurnality varied with age. These patterns may reflect the seasonally varying but unscheduled, life-long, strenuous physical labor that typifies many non-industrialized economies. These results also suggest that single morning samples may substantially underestimate peak circulating T for an individual and, most importantly, that exogenous signals may moderate diurnality and the trajectory of age-related change in the male gonadal axis.


Asunto(s)
Adaptación Fisiológica , Ritmo Circadiano/fisiología , Estaciones del Año , Testosterona/metabolismo , Adulto , Bolivia , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Población Rural , Saliva/química , Testosterona/sangre , Adulto Joven
20.
Respir Physiol Neurobiol ; 158(2-3): 161-71, 2007 Sep 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17644049

RESUMEN

High-altitude natives have distinctive biological characteristics that appear to offset the stress of hypoxia. Evolutionary theory reasons that they reflect genetic adaptations resulting from natural selection on traits with heritable variation. Furthermore, high-altitude natives of the Andean and Tibetan Plateaus differ from one another, perhaps resulting from different evolutionary histories. Three approaches have developed a case for the possibility of population genetic differences: comparing means of classical physiological traits measured in samples of natives and migrants between altitudes, estimating genetic variance using statistical genetics techniques, and comparing features of species with different evolutionary histories. Tibetans have an inferred autosomal dominant major gene for high oxygen saturation that is associated with higher offspring survival, a strong indicator of ongoing natural selection. New approaches use candidate gene and genomic analyses. Conclusive evidence about population genetic differences and associations with phenotypes remains to be discovered.


Asunto(s)
Aclimatación/genética , Altitud , Modelos Genéticos , Consumo de Oxígeno/genética , Selección Genética , Variación Genética , Genética de Población , Humanos , Hipoxia/genética , Oxígeno/sangre , Consumo de Oxígeno/fisiología , Fenotipo
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