Journal article

Adaptive evolution of the tumour suppressor BRCA1 in humans and chimpanzees

GA Huttley, S Easteal, MC Southey, A Tesoriero, GG Giles, MRE McCredie, JL Hopper, DJ Venter

Nature Genetics | NATURE AMERICA INC | Published : 2000

Abstract

Mutations in BRCA1 (ref. 1) confer an increased risk of female breast cancer. In a genome-wide scan of linkage disequilibrium (LD), a high level of LD was detected among microsatellite markers flanking BRCA1 (ref. 3), raising the prospect that positive natural selection may have acted on this gene. We have used the predictions of evolutionary genetic theory to investigate this further. Using phylogeny-based maximum likelihood analysis of the BRCA1 sequences from primates and other mammals, we found that the ratios of replacement to silent nucleotide substitutions on the human and chimpanzee lineages were not different from one another (P=0.8), were different from those of other primate linea..

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University of Melbourne Researchers