Evolutionary Origin of MUTYH Germline Pathogenic Variations in Modern Humans

Author:

Xiao Fengxia12,Li Jiaheng1,Lagniton Philip Naderev Panuringan1,Kou Si Hoi1,Lei Huijun1ORCID,Tam Benjamin1ORCID,Wang San Ming1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Frontiers Science Center for Precision Oncology, Cancer Centre and Institute of Translational Medicine, Department of Public Health and Medical Administration, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Macau, Macao, China

2. Department of Radiation Oncology, Qilu Hospital of Shandong University, Jinan 250062, China

Abstract

MUTYH plays an essential role in preventing oxidation-caused DNA damage. Pathogenic germline variations in MUTYH damage its function, causing intestinal polyposis and colorectal cancer. Determination of the evolutionary origin of the variation is essential to understanding the etiological relationship between MUTYH variation and cancer development. In this study, we analyzed the origins of pathogenic germline variants in human MUTYH. Using a phylogenic approach, we searched MUTYH pathogenic variants in modern humans in the MUTYH of 99 vertebrates across eight clades. We did not find pathogenic variants shared between modern humans and the non-human vertebrates following the evolutionary tree, ruling out the possibility of cross-species conservation as the origin of human pathogenic variants in MUTYH. We then searched the variants in the MUTYH of 5031 ancient humans and extinct Neanderthals and Denisovans. We identified 24 pathogenic variants in 42 ancient humans dated between 30,570 and 480 years before present (BP), and three pathogenic variants in Neanderthals dated between 65,000 and 38,310 years BP. Data from our study revealed that human MUTYH pathogenic variants mostly arose in recent human history and partially originated from Neanderthals.

Funder

Macau Science and Technology Development Fund

University of Macau Fund

Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Macau

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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