We reach more than 65,000 registered users in Dec!!

Videos Sci-Tech Physics Business Geology Astronomy
Genetic adaptations help Amazonian populations resist Chagas infection

Genetic adaptations help Amazonian populations resist Chagas infection

Like  Save

Chagas disease affects approximately 6 million people in Latin America and is one of the leading causes of death in this region. However, despite being in contact with the parasite, Amazonian populations hardly suffer from Chagas infection.

An international study led by the Institute for Evolutionary Biology (IBE-CSIC-UPF) and University of Sao Paulo, in collaboration with Harvard Medical School and the Department of Medicine and Life Sciences (MELIS) at the UPF, has discovered a genetic variant that confers resistance to Chagas infection in Amazonian populations.

Area of Amazonia with high frequency of the identified allele. Source: Science Advances. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abo0234

The study, which analysed genomic data from 118 contemporary individuals from 19 different Amazonian populations, revealed that, before the arrival of Europeans, Amazonian populations acquired genetic adaptations that gave them resistance to infectious diseases, such as that caused by the Chagas pathogen, which allowed them to adapt to their lifestyle in the jungle.
“We focused on finding evidence of positive natural selection related to tropical diseases in the Americas.” Points out Tábita Hünemeier, Principal Investigator at the Institute of Evolutionary Biology (IBE-CSIC-UPF) who led the study.
Through genome analysis and functional studies, a variant of the PPP3CA gene has been identified at high frequency in the inhabitants of Amazonia, which reduces the risk of infection by the Chagas pathogen. The results of the study show that this variant, expressed in heart tissue and immune cells, decreases the internalisation of the parasite in cardiac cells.
“The presence of the PPP3CA gene variant could be the cause of milder disease or less infection in these populations.” Adds David Comas, Professor of Biology in the MELIS-UPF department, Principal Investigator at IBE (CSIC-Pompeu Fabra University) and co-author of the research.
 
“The presence of the PPP3CA gene variant could be the cause of milder disease or less infection in these populations.”
 
Natural selection for increased resistance to Chagas disease began 7,500 years ago, after populations in the Amazon separated from populations in the Andes and on the Pacific coast. This increased resistance to tropical diseases, as well as genes that determine novelty-seeking behavior, would have been an advantage for the lifestyle in the jungle, which would have helped fix these traits in the Amazonian population.


This content is taken from Universitat Pompeu Fabra - Barcelona
List of Referenes
  1. Cainã M. Couto-Silva, Kelly Nunes, Gabriela Venturini, Marcos Araújo Castro e Silva, Lygia V. Pereira, David Comas, Alexandre Pereira, Tábita Hünemeier. Indigenous people from Amazon show genetic signatures of pathogen-driven selection. Science Advances, 2023; 9 (10) DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abo0234

Cite This Article as
"Genetic adaptations help Amazonian populations resist Chagas infection", MachPrinciple, March 15, 2023, https://machprinciple.com/post/Genetic-adaptations-help-Amazonian-populations-resist-Chagas-infection

    No tags found for this post

Leave a comment

0Likes

0Comments

Like   Share Share