Evolution of threat response-related polymorphisms at the SLC6A4 locus in callitrichid primates

Author:

Twyman Hanlu1,Heywood India1,Barros Marília2,Zeredo Jorge3ORCID,Mundy Nicholas I.1ORCID,Santangelo Andrea M.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology, Downing Street , Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK

2. Departamento de Farmácia, Universidade de Brasília, Campus Universitário - Asa Norte , Brasília, Brazil

3. Graduate Program in Health Sciences and Technologies, Universidade de Brasília, Campus Ceilândia – Ceilândia Sul , Brasília, DF CEP 72.220-275, Brazil

4. MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge, 15 Chaucer Road , Cambridge CB2 7EF, UK

Abstract

Variation in an upstream repetitive region at the SLC6A4 locus, which encodes the serotonin transporter, is associated with anxiety-related behaviour in a few primate species, including humans and rhesus macaques, and has been suggested to be related to ecological adaptability among macaques. In this study, we investigate evolution of SLC6A4 polymorphisms associated with anxiety-related behaviour in common marmosets ( Callithrix jacchus ). Assaying variation in the SLC6A4 repeat region across 14 species in eight genera of callitrichid primates (marmosets and tamarins), we find large interspecific variation in the number of repeats present (24–43). The black tufted-ear marmoset ( C. penicillata ) has sequence polymorphisms similar to those found in the common marmoset, which is its sister species, and no other species has intraspecific variation at these sites. We conclude that, similar to humans and macaques, the functional polymorphism at SLC6A4 in common marmosets has a recent evolutionary origin, and that the anxiety-related allele is evolutionarily derived. Common/black tufted-ear marmosets and rhesus/bonnet macaques share high ecological adaptability and behavioural flexibility that we propose may be related to the maintenance of the polymorphism.

Funder

Murray Edwards College, Cambridge

University of Cambridge

British Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

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