Title: Gilbert S. Omenn, M.D., Ph.D.
1 Ecogenetics, Evolutionary Biology, Genomics, and
Medicine
Gilbert S. Omenn, M.D., Ph.D. University of
Michigan Conference Darwin y Medicina Mexico
City, UNAM, 25 April, 2008
2 15-16 February, 2001
3Its a New World
- New Biology---New Technology
- Genome Expression Microarrays
- Comparative Genomics
- Proteomics
- Bioinformatics, Computational Medicine, and
Evolutionary Biology
Path to predictive, personalized,
preventive (P3) healthcare
4Break- through of the Year, 2005
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6Medicine Needs EvolutionNesse, Stearns, Omenn
Science 24 Feb 2006
- Evolution a vibrant foundation for all biology
- Evolutionary thinking can help researchers and
clinicians answer common questions - o Persistence of genes predisposing to
depression, high blood pressure, diabetes, and
other diseases - o Usefulness of cough, fever, diarrhea
7Multi- and Interdisciplinary Research will be
Required to Solve the Puzzle of Complex
Diseases and Conditions
Genes Behavior Diet/Nutrition Infectious
agents Environment Society ??? evolution
8Eco-Genetics
- Known inherited predispositions to
- Foods
- Food additives
- Infectious agents
- Drug chemicals
- Pesticides
- Inhaled pollutants
- Sensory stimuli
- Allergic sensitizing agents
-
9Eco-Genetics of Food, Nutrition, and Cultural
Sensitivity
- Anthropology and biology of lactase persistence
- Everybody needs milk
- Got Milk?
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11Digestion of Milk from the Diet
- Nearly all mammals digest the sugars in Mothers
milk until weaning. - The enzyme lactase in the intestine does it.
- Lactase production usually drops 90 during the
first four years of life in humans, though the
rate varies widely. - Certain human populations have a mutation (on
chromosome 2) which results in persistence of
lactase activity (gain of function).
12Lactose Intolerance by Group
Human Groups Percent Intolerant Allele Frequency
Swedish 2 0.14
Europeans in Australia 4 0.20
Swiss 10 0.32
American Caucasians 12 0.35
Finns 18 0.42
African Tutsi 20 0.45
African Fulani 23 0.48
American Blacks 75 0.87
Australian Aborigines 85 0.92
African Bantu 89 0.94
Chinese 93 0.96
Thais 98 0.99
American Indians 100 1.00
13Consequences
- Persistence of lactase in the intestine permits
the unnatural continuation of milk ingestion
throughout life, enhancing growth and
development. One benefit is higher calcium
intake, especially in northern climes where sun
is insufficient to activate vitamin D. - People without this mutation shut off lactase
production and become lactose malabsorbers
they may become lactose intolerant with
symptoms of excess gas (hydrogen) and diarrhea
upon eating lactose-containing dairy products. - The Navajo used powdered milk supplies to paint
their adobe homes.
14Why Does Loss of Lactase Lead to Symptoms?
- The lactose in milk remains undigested and
unabsorbed through the intestinal wall into the
bloodstream. - Gut bacteria adapt to the abundance of lactose
(compared with glucose, etc) and metabolize the
lactose, generating lots of gas by fermentation.
- Gas can cause stomach cramps, bloating, diarrhea
the osmotic pressure rises, reducing resorption
of water from the colon a laxative effect.
15Are Lactose Maldigestion and Lactose Intolerance
Important in Mexico?
- Rosado et al, J Nutrition 1241052, 1994
- Children and adults (N926) from Sonora,
Mexico, and Yucatan - Milk consumption (in 1982) was 219/-22,
128/-25, and 19/-1 gm/day - Whole milk vs lactose-hydrolyzed milk
major intolerance symptoms uncommon (0-11 of
children, 7-17 of 13-60 y/o) maldigestion by
hydrogen breath test, 2-43, highest in Yucatan.
16Lactose Malabsorption in Mexican-Americans
- Wotecki et al, Amer J Clin Nutr 30470,1977
- Prevalence 53 of Mexican-Americans and 15 of
Anglo-Americans after 50 gm lactose load (glucose
increase lt25 mg/dl). - Mean consumption of milk and dairy products was
same in lactose absorbers and malabsorbers in
both groups, though GI symptoms after milk was
60 vs 24. - Some reduced milk-drinking due to symptoms
others continued for laxative benefit!
17What is the Diagnosis? What is Normal?
- In Europe and North America, lactose intolerance
is regarded as a clinical problem, a medical
diagnosis. Those who have symptoms may not know
the cause lactose intolerance actually accounts
for many cases of irritable bowel syndrome. - In populations where most people are lactose
malabsorbers, cultural nutritional practices will
dominate.
18 Prevention of Symptoms
- Avoid milk
- Drink lactose-free milk (enzyme-treated)
- Lactose-reduced (L. acidophilus) milk, as in
yogurt and in hard cheeses - Lactase pills
- Gene therapy??
- Note Milk sold for pet cats remarkably,
European cat breeds have a mutation similar to
the human European mutation, whereas Asian breeds
are particularly sensitive!
19When Did This Mutation Arise?
- Most likely
- 1. Separate events in Sweden and in the
Arabian Peninsula about 4000 BC, converging as
they spread, or - 2. Single event in the Middle East about
4500 BC, with radiation from there. - 3. Plus a more recent mutation in the East
African Tutsi. - A small survival advantage over the 6000-8000
years since goats, sheep, and cattle were
domesticated can account for the population
differences now observed.
20An Associated Polymorphism of Apolipoprotein
A-IV-2 (His360Gln)
- Apo A-IV is a 46 kD plasma glycoprotein
synthesized in the intestine. - His/Gln polymorphism in Caucasians at codon 360
(chromosome 11) modifies milkfat absorption and
chylomicron clearance. - Worldwide distribution resembles lactase
persistence across 29 population groups, - r 0.94 (plt0.000001). Highest prevalence in
Iceland probably carried into Europe by
Vikings. - Weinberg, Genetic Epi 17285, 1999
21Eco-Genetics
- Known inherited predispositions to
- Drug chemicals
- Pesticides
- Inhaled pollutants
- Foods
- Food additives
- Sensory stimuli
- Allergic sensitizing agents
- Infectious agents
22Variation in Susceptibility to Infections
- Malaria (P. falciparum type) children with
sickle hemoglobin trait have greater survival. - Malaria (P. vivax type) people lacking the
Duffy (Fy) red blood cell antigen are resistant
to this parasite, which enters the cell through
this surface antigen. - People lacking CCR5 receptors on lymphocytes are
resistant to infection by HIV.
23Distinguishing between Host Defenses and
Infectious Agent Offenses
- Symptoms of host defenses include pain, nausea,
vomiting, diarrhea, fatigue, anxiety - Treatment of these symptoms may suppress
defenses, promoting pathogen transmission and
harming patients - Shigella diarrhea faster recovery and fewer
complications without anti-diarrheal meds. - Cough suppressants raise risk of pneumonia
- Acute phase response to infection, trauma, or
cancers both behavioral (fever) and physiological
(sequestration of Fe, Zn). Counterpart in insects.
24Evolution and Persistence of Virulence
- Host-parasite relationships are greatly
influenced by the rapidity of transmission. - When transmission is rapid, pathogens can
disregard many host variables. - When transmission is slow, pathogens benefit by
establishing a long-term balanced relationship
with the host. - Modeling shows vaccines which prevent infection
constrain prevalence and virulence vaccines that
offer only anti-toxin immunity have opposite
effects.
25Emergence of Meta-Genomics
- Microbes run the worldconverting key elements
of life (C,N,O,S) into accessible forms
performing photosynthesis living in ecological
and human host niches, making nutrients, metals,
and vitamins available to the hosts, digesting
foods, breaking down toxins, fighting off
disease-causing microbes. - Microbial communities have adapted through
billions of years of environmental changes. New
molecular methods permit analysis of whole
communities, not just individual species or
isolates.
26Metagenomics, A New Science Revealing the
Secrets of our Microbial Planet National
Research Council U.S., 2007
- Combines the power of genomics, bioinformatics,
and systems biology - Involves study of sequences and functions of
genomes of many organisms simultaneously,
including a great many not culturableas
presented by Dr. Francino today - Libraries already prepared from oceans, coral
reefs, soils, whale carcasses, thermal vents, and
hot springs - Expect quite different microbial communities in
oral cavity, respiratory passages, gut,
genito-urinary, and skin environments of people
with different genotypes and different
environmental circumstances, including diets,
diseases, infections, and therapies.
27Framework for Regulatory Decision-Making for
Chemicals
- Epidemiology
- Hazard Identification Lifetime rodent
bioassays - Short-term, in vitro/in vivo tests
- Structure / activity
- Potency (dose/response)
- Risk Characterization Exposure analysis
- Variation in susceptibility
- Information
- Risk Reduction Substitution
- Regulation / Prohibition
-
28Impetus for Susceptibility Analysis
- Clinical Occupational Medicine - Why me,
Doc? - OSH Act requires that standards be set so
that no - workershall suffer adverse effects.
- Clean Air Act requires standards set to
protect most - susceptible subgroups.
- Food Quality Protection Act requires
protection of - children and other vulnerable
subpopulations. - To discover mechanisms or markers for diseases
that - may appear only years later -- and
could be prevented - getting inside the black box
29Eco-Genetic Polymorphisms
- Tissue susceptibility
- G6PD deficiency
- Alpha1-anti-trypsin deficiency
- Biotransformation enzymes
- Acetylator phenotype
-
- Debrisoquine hydroxylation
- (Carbon oxidation - P450)
-
- Paraoxonase activity
30Occupational Bladder Cancer(Huddersfield, U.K.
Data)
- Slow Acetylators
- Controls 57
- Bladder CA 67
- Dye workers (naphthylamines) 96
- Clerical workers 40
- Machine oils workers 44
31Acetylator Phenotype bimodal distribution of
plasma level of active drug (INH) _at_ 6 hours after
standard dose
- Genetics Single gene
- Enzyme N-acetyl-transferase in liver
- Other drugs that require acetylation
- hydralazine dapsone other sulfas
- phenalzine cyclophosphamide
- What about occupational or environmental
chemicals that are detoxified by acetylation? - Industrial anti-oxidants
- Naphthylamines
- Benzidines, biphenyls
-
32Susceptibility to Chronic Beryllium Disease
- An immune-mediated pulmonary granulomatous
- disease among exposed workers
- HLA-DP gene contains a Glu lysine mutation
- at position 69 (Glu-69) predisposes to
CBD - a genetic biomarker of susceptibility
- Can be combined with lymphocyte proliferation
- test for evidence of sensitization to
beryllium - Value-of-information from mandatory and
- voluntary screening programs has been
- estimated for risk reduction
possibilities - social, legal, and ethical issues are
crucial
33Molecular Signatures
- Numerous studies underway using gene expression
microarrays and proteomics to identify and
utilize chemical-specific molecular signatures
for exposures, early effects, and evidence of
variation in susceptibility. - Model chemical acetaminophen--toxigenomics and
toxicoproteomics of liver damage.
34The Thrifty Genotype and Maladaptation to
Modern Environments
- Humans adapted to the Paleolithic environment of
hunters and gatherers are maladapted to modern
lifestyles. - Phenotypes are obesity, high BP, metabolic
syndrome, and adult-onset diabetes.
- Most humans consume much more fat, sugars, and
salt, but less fiber and phytochemicals. Not
simply digestive and cardiovascular systems, but
how our brains perceive and process stimuli from
food sources. - The evolution from quadripedal to bipedal gait
puts pressure on the lower spine, with low back
pain, complications of childbirth, and tendency
to fainting and circulating problems.
35Evolution and High Blood PressureA. B. Weder,
Hypertension 2007 49260
- Sodium Hypothesis to explain higher incidence of
high blood pressure in African-Americans
thrifty genotypes to maintain sodium levels,
prevent excretion in kidneys, in times of poor
diets, including slave ships. - When BP increases, kidney output of Na and water
are increased, and BP falls feedback. - Hypertension is viewed as an emergent property
of the entire cardiovascular system with feedback
loops. - Epi studies 30-50 of HBP risk due to heritable
factors.
36Genes/Alleles Predisposing to High BP
- Angiotensinogen, AGT -6A
- G-Protein, beta-3 subunit, GNB3, 825T
- These two are in genomic regions of broad linkage
disequilibrium and low haplotype diversityhence
arose recently, were exposed to positive
selection - Beta-2 adrenergic receptor, 47A and 79C
- Epithelial sodium channel alpha-subunit (--946G)
- Cytochrome P450, CYP3A51
- All 5 sodium-conserving ancestral variants are
much more prevalent in African (equatorial)
populations.
37Growth Development and Evolution of High Blood
Pressure (HBP)
- Fetus is programmed to survive nutritional
scarcity in the mother if born into an
environment of excess sodium and calories, leads
to metabolic syndrome, obesity, and high BP. - Fetal growth retardation with decreased
glomerular filtration capacity set for higher
range of BP - Thus, good maternal nutrition could prevent or
delay onset of some HBP cases.
38Allometry and Kidney Growth
- Kidney weight is proportional to body weight with
an allometric constant of 0.8, while blood volume
scales with constant 1.0. - Kidney growth ceases at sexual maturity smaller
as menarche and andrarche move to younger ages. - Adaptation sets blood pressure and sodium
excretion higher.
39Uricase and Uric Acid
- Serum uric acid levels are higher in humans that
most other mammals (except guinea pigs and
Dalmatian dogs). - Humans lack hepatic uricase.
- Uric acid can help maintain BP via
vasoconstriction in low sodium environments - In high-sodium societies, high uric acid may
cause subtle renal injury, induce chronic salt
sensitivity, and lead to high BP.
40Dopamine-4 Receptor Repeat Polymorphism and High
Blood Pressure
- Dopamine release in the kidney increases renal
sodium excretion. In essential hypertension, DA
effect on sodium excretion is blunted. - DA-4 receptors are expressed in juxtaglomerular
and cortical collecting cells associations
between long allele in exon 3 and slight
increases in systolic BP, diastolic BP, and
history of alcohol use. - DA-1 receptor (A48G) and GPCR kinase-4 gene
(GRK3gA142V) polymorphisms also associated with
high BP.
41Metabolic Syndrome in Mexico and in Mexican
AmericansBastarrachea et al, Human Biology
79121, 2007
- GEMM Family Study so far, 375 individuals in 21
extended families. - All metabolic and clinical endpoints
significantly heritable. - Previous U.S. study Mexican-Americans have
highest prevalence (32) of metabolic syndrome
(ATP-III definition) non-Hispanic whites 24,
African Americans 22.
42Population Genetics From Evolutionary History to
Genetic Medicine Jorde et al, Human Mol
Genetics 2001
- The effective human population size is
surprisingly small, about 10,000, far less than
the census size, based on mitochondrial DNA, Y
chromosome variation, and autosomal
polymorphisms. - Human population probably expanded rapidly in
late Pleistocenetell-tale rare variants - Genetic diversity between the major continental
populations is only 10-15 vs 85-90 within each
continent. - Much evidence supports African origin of modern
humans, with subset colonizing Asia and Europe
about 100,000 years ago. Most persuasive
haplotypes found outside Africa are usually
subsets of those found within Africa.
43Genome-wide Detection and Characterization of
Positive Selection in Human Populations (1)
- Dense maps of human genetic variation 3 million
polymorphisms (HapMap2). - Long-range haplotype methods identify alleles
segregating in a population undergoing recent
selection. - Cross-population comparisons help discover
alleles swept to near-fixation in a population. - Found gt300 strong candidate regions focused on
22 strongest regions. - .
44Genome-wide Detection and Characterization of
Positive Selection in Human Populations (2)
- Identified 26 non-synonymous, coding, SNPs
showing regional evidence of positive selection. - Found 2 genes in a common biological process with
positive selection in the same population - LARGE and DMD in West Africa, related to
infection by Lassa virus - SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 in Europe, related to skin
pigmentation - EDAR and EDA2R in Asia, involved in hair follicle
development. - Sabeti et al. Nature
2007449913-919
45Genome-wide Detection and Characterization of
Positive Selection in Human Populations (3)
- The most differentiated genes among 3 million
markers studied globally are those determining
skin pigmentation. - May have been linked to risk of ricketts (failure
of bone production) if there is not sufficient
vitamin D and activation of vitamin D by
sunlight, as in northern European populations.
46A Genome-Wide Association Study of Global Gene
Expression (1)Dixon et al. Nature Genetics
2007391202-1207
- Aim build a database to systematically examine
potential effects of disease-associated variants
on transcript expression. - Created a global map of effects of polymorphisms
on gene expression in 400 children from 206
British families in asthma study. Looking for
regulatory effects (non-coding SNPs). - Genotyped 408,000 SNPs measured gene expression
of 54,000 transcripts from 20,599 genes in
lymphoblastoid cell lines. - 28 of transcripts, representing 6600 genes, had
narrow heritability H2 gt0.3.
47A Genome-Wide Association Study of Global Gene
Expression (2)
- Highly heritable expression levels are best
evidence that trait is genetically regulated. - LCL cells provide general indicator of gene
expression. - Use Affy chips for gene expression, Illumina
beads to genotype - Identified 88 genes separately associated with 3
or more SNPs (cis and trans). - Only 3 SNPs assd with gt5 transcriptsno evidence
for master regulators
48A Genome-Wide Association Study of Global Gene
Expression (3)
- Used Gene Ontology to identify genes enriched
among highly heritable traits - Greatest enrichment response to unfolded
proteins--chaperonins and heat shock proteins - May represent an evolutionary response to
cellular stress unfolded proteins key in prion
disease, Alzheimer disease, diabetic pancreatic
beta cells - Cell cycle, RNA processing, DNA repair, and
immune response genes also highly heritable.
49Genome-Wide Association Study (4) Applied to
Childhood AsthmaMoffatt et al, Nature 2007
448 470-47
- New susceptibility locus non-coding SNPs
residing within a 206-kb segment on chromosome
17q23. - Of 19 genes in this region, the expression
database pointed to ORMDL3 (plt10-22), correlated
(r0.67) with asthma. Codes a transmembrane
protein anchored in endoplasmic reticulum. - Disease-associated alleles accounted for 30 of
variance of expression. - Can expose LCL cells to asthma triggers.
50Other Disease-Associated Genome-Wide Studies (5)
- Crohns disease PTGER4, chromosome 5
- Type 2 adult-onset diabetes PHACS on chr 11
- Fetal hemoglobin expression in adults markers
upstream of HBS1L on chr 6q23. - LDL and HDL cholesterol levels 11 genes
confirmed, 7 novel genes identified
51Genome-Wide Disease Association Studies Willer
et al, Nature Genetics 200840161-169
- Study of 20,000 people revealed 18 genes which
influence cholesterol levels, of which 7 are
newly identified. - Those increasing total and LDL-cholesterol match
those predisposing to coronary heart disease. - However, no protective variants were found for
action via HDL-C. Maybe this explains recent
failures of estrogen replacement in Womens
Health Initiative trials and of Pfizer
HDL-C-enhancing drug in coronary disease patients.
52Genomic Evidence for Evolution of the Lung
Torday Rehan, Amer J Resp Cell Mol Biol 318,
2004
- Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) is a
highly conserved, stretch-regulated gene
necessary for embryonic transition from branching
morphogenesis to alveolization of the lung,
beginning with the fish swim bladder. - Growth and stretching up-regulate, while
microgravity and overdistension down-regulate,
PTHrP and PTHrP receptor mRNA in alveolar type II
cells. - Both surfactant homeostasis and alveolar
capillary perfusion are under PTHrP control. - Phylogeny across vertebrate species reveals
evolutionary amplification of PTHrP signaling
mediating development, modeling, and remodeling
of the alveolar wall.
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55PTHrP Signaling Between Germ Layers
- By simultaneously stimulating activities of PTHrP
and PTHrP-receptor, alveolar wall distention
increases surfactant production and alveolar
capillary blood flow, with ventilation/perfusion
(V/Q) matching. - V/Q matching is the evolutionary integration of
cell/molecular interactions by which the lung and
vasculature have adapted to the progressive
increase in metabolic demand for oxygen. - PTHrP activates cyclic AMP-dependent protein
kinase A, which drives adipose differentiation
related protein (ADRP) to promote trafficking of
lipid substrate for surfactant and leptin to
stimulate differentiation of alveolar type II
cells, during thinning of the alveolar wall due
to inhibition of fibroblasts by PTHrP.
56Evidence from Ontology and Phylogeny
- Three dramatically different types of lung
- Single-chambered lung of fish, frogs, lizards
100X diameter interstitial muscle dominates - Bronchoalveolar lung of mammals conducting and
terminal airways are convoluted, facilitating gas
exchange increased saturation and greater
turnover of surfactant protects the smaller
alveoli - Cross-current saccular lung of birds the
exception to prove the rule lack alveoli, lungs
are stiff and fixed to thorax, yet possess type
II cells that express PTHrP and surfactant.
PTHrPs role in bone morphogenesis links hollow
bones with air sacs of the respiratory system of
birds.
57Effects of Deletion of PTHrP Clinical Insights
and Advances
- Models of what pathology might result in humans
with mutations of PTHrP have been produced as
knock-outs in mice. - Deletion of PTHrP results in failed alveolization
and death due to pulmonary insufficiency within
minutes to hours of birth. The lung develops
normally up to the stage of canalization,
coincident with the point in development when
PTHrP is produced in mice, rats, and humans.
Functionally, the lung fails to produce
surfactant due to immaturity of the embryonic
lung tissue layers. - These abnormalities could account for various
types of surfactant-deficient syndromes in human
newborns. - PPARgamma agonists can help premature babies with
bronchopulmonary dysplasia (Torday Rehan, Peds
Res 2007).
58Admixture Studies in MexicoJimenez-Sanchez,
Science 300295, 2003
- Mexico has a characteristic genetic population
structure from admixture of 65 native Indian
groups with those of Spanish ancestry. - Genomic medicine was designated a priority in
health care and medical research during the
tenure of Dr. Julio Frenk as Secretary of Health. - A 15-year plan for Genomic Medicine began with
the establishment of INMEGEN, Instituto de
Medicina Genomica in the M-NIH, a Consortium for
the INMEGEN, and public debate on ELSI.
59Genome-wide Admixture Panel for Hispanic/Latino
PopulationsMao et al, Amer J Human Genetics
801171, 2007
- Admixture mapping is a powerful method for
identifying genetic risk factors for complex
traits and diseases having prevalence differences
across populations. - Here a panel of 2120 ancestry-informative
markers maximizes differences between Native
American and European populations while
minimizing differences between Mexican (Maya and
Nahua) and South American (Aymara and Quechua)
populations. - Can reduce by 100X the genotyping required for
whole-genome association studies in these
populations.
60Mao, 2007 PCO 3D Plot of Genetic Distances with
Affy 500K Array
61Mao et al, 2007 Principal coordinate analysis
and 3D plot separating European from
MesoAmerican, Maya from others.
62SUMMARY
- Genome-wide studies and databases are directly
useful for analyses of the risk factors and
pathways for specific diseases in different
populations around the world and in diverse
populations within individual countries such as
Mexico and the United States. - Evolutionary biology provides helpful insights
for a wide array of developmental, metabolic, and
disease phenotypes in humans. - As we celebrate 200th anniversary of Darwins
birth, evolution by natural selection is a
foundation for all of biology, including medicine.