Pleiotropic Effects of Immune Responses Explain Variation in the Prevalence of Fibroproliferative Diseases.

Many diseases are differentially distributed among human populations. Differential selection on genetic variants in ancestral environments that coincidentally predispose to disease can be an underlying cause of these unequal prevalence patterns. Selected genes may be pleiotropic, affecting multiple...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shirley B Russell, Joan C Smith, Minjun Huang, Joel S Trupin, Scott M Williams
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-11-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4634921?pdf=render
id doaj-67ba5dd0d2934f47879e41da1fba2217
record_format Article
spelling doaj-67ba5dd0d2934f47879e41da1fba22172020-11-25T00:02:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042015-11-011111e100556810.1371/journal.pgen.1005568Pleiotropic Effects of Immune Responses Explain Variation in the Prevalence of Fibroproliferative Diseases.Shirley B RussellJoan C SmithMinjun HuangJoel S TrupinScott M WilliamsMany diseases are differentially distributed among human populations. Differential selection on genetic variants in ancestral environments that coincidentally predispose to disease can be an underlying cause of these unequal prevalence patterns. Selected genes may be pleiotropic, affecting multiple phenotypes and resulting in more than one disease or trait. Patterns of pleiotropy may be helpful in understanding the underlying causes of an array of conditions in a population. For example, several fibroproliferative diseases are more prevalent and severe in populations of sub-Saharan ancestry. We propose that this disparity is due to selection for an enhanced Th2 response that confers resistance to helminthic infections, and concurrently increases susceptibility to fibrosis due to the profibrotic action of Th2 cytokines. Many studies on selection of Th2-related genes for host resistance to helminths have been reported, but the pleiotropic impact of this selection on the distribution of fibrotic disorders has not been explicitly investigated. We discuss the disproportionate occurrence of fibroproliferative diseases in individuals of African ancestry and provide evidence that adaptation of the immune system has shaped the genetic structure of these human populations in ways that alter the distribution of multiple fibroproliferative diseases.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4634921?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shirley B Russell
Joan C Smith
Minjun Huang
Joel S Trupin
Scott M Williams
spellingShingle Shirley B Russell
Joan C Smith
Minjun Huang
Joel S Trupin
Scott M Williams
Pleiotropic Effects of Immune Responses Explain Variation in the Prevalence of Fibroproliferative Diseases.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Shirley B Russell
Joan C Smith
Minjun Huang
Joel S Trupin
Scott M Williams
author_sort Shirley B Russell
title Pleiotropic Effects of Immune Responses Explain Variation in the Prevalence of Fibroproliferative Diseases.
title_short Pleiotropic Effects of Immune Responses Explain Variation in the Prevalence of Fibroproliferative Diseases.
title_full Pleiotropic Effects of Immune Responses Explain Variation in the Prevalence of Fibroproliferative Diseases.
title_fullStr Pleiotropic Effects of Immune Responses Explain Variation in the Prevalence of Fibroproliferative Diseases.
title_full_unstemmed Pleiotropic Effects of Immune Responses Explain Variation in the Prevalence of Fibroproliferative Diseases.
title_sort pleiotropic effects of immune responses explain variation in the prevalence of fibroproliferative diseases.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2015-11-01
description Many diseases are differentially distributed among human populations. Differential selection on genetic variants in ancestral environments that coincidentally predispose to disease can be an underlying cause of these unequal prevalence patterns. Selected genes may be pleiotropic, affecting multiple phenotypes and resulting in more than one disease or trait. Patterns of pleiotropy may be helpful in understanding the underlying causes of an array of conditions in a population. For example, several fibroproliferative diseases are more prevalent and severe in populations of sub-Saharan ancestry. We propose that this disparity is due to selection for an enhanced Th2 response that confers resistance to helminthic infections, and concurrently increases susceptibility to fibrosis due to the profibrotic action of Th2 cytokines. Many studies on selection of Th2-related genes for host resistance to helminths have been reported, but the pleiotropic impact of this selection on the distribution of fibrotic disorders has not been explicitly investigated. We discuss the disproportionate occurrence of fibroproliferative diseases in individuals of African ancestry and provide evidence that adaptation of the immune system has shaped the genetic structure of these human populations in ways that alter the distribution of multiple fibroproliferative diseases.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4634921?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT shirleybrussell pleiotropiceffectsofimmuneresponsesexplainvariationintheprevalenceoffibroproliferativediseases
AT joancsmith pleiotropiceffectsofimmuneresponsesexplainvariationintheprevalenceoffibroproliferativediseases
AT minjunhuang pleiotropiceffectsofimmuneresponsesexplainvariationintheprevalenceoffibroproliferativediseases
AT joelstrupin pleiotropiceffectsofimmuneresponsesexplainvariationintheprevalenceoffibroproliferativediseases
AT scottmwilliams pleiotropiceffectsofimmuneresponsesexplainvariationintheprevalenceoffibroproliferativediseases
_version_ 1725436032176881664