Changes in selective pressures associated with human population expansion may explain metabolic and immune related pathways enriched for signatures of positive selection

2016 
Background The study of local adaptation processes is a very important research topic in the field of population genomics. There is a particular interest in the study of human populations because they underwent a process of rapid spatial expansion and faced important environmental changes that translated into changes in selective pressures. New mutations may have been selected for in the new environment and previously existing genetic variants may have become detrimental. Immune related genes may have been released from the selective pressure exerted by pathogens in the ancestral environment and new variants may have been positively selected due to pathogens present in the newly colonized habitat. Also, variants that had a selective advantage in past environments may have become deleterious in the modern world due to external stimuli including climatic, dietary and behavioral changes, which could explain the high prevalence of some polygenic diseases such as diabetes and obesity.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    107
    References
    19
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []