The genetic architecture of adaptations to high altitude in Ethiopia
Gorka Alkorta-Aranburu, Cynthia M. Beall, David B. Witonsky, Amha, Gebremedhin, Jonathan K. Pritchard, Anna Di Rienzo

TL;DR
This study investigates the genetic basis of high-altitude adaptation in Ethiopian populations, revealing distinct genetic variants and pathways involved compared to other high-altitude populations like Tibetans.
Contribution
It extends genomic analysis to Ethiopian highlanders, identifying unique genetic variants and pathways associated with altitude adaptation, differing from Tibetan genetic adaptations.
Findings
SNP rs10803083 linked to hemoglobin in Amhara
No significant association for oxygen saturation
Differentiated variants involved in pathogen defense and DNA repair
Abstract
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…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh Altitude and Hypoxia · Hemoglobinopathies and Related Disorders · Epigenetics and DNA Methylation
