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Rapid adaptive increase of amylase gene copy number in Indigenous Andeans.

Scheer Kendra, K Landau, Luane J B LJB et al.

42086559 PubMed ID
25 Authors
2026-05-05 Published
183 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SK
Scheer Kendra
KL
K Landau
LJ
Luane J B LJB
JK
Jorgensen Kelsey
KK
K Karageorgiou
CC
Charikleia C
SL
Siao Lindsey
LA
L Alkan
CC
Can C
MR
Morales Rivera Angelis M
AO
AM Osborne
CC
Christopher C
GO
Garcia Obed A
OP
OA Pearson
LL
Laurel L
KM
Kiyamu Melisa
MR
M Rivera-Ch
MM
María M
LF
León-Velarde Fabiola
FL
F Lee
FS
Frank S FS
BT
Brutsaert Tom
TB
T Bigham
AW
Abigail W AW
GO
Gokcumen Omer
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The salivary amylase gene AMY1 exhibits remarkable copy number variation linked to dietary shifts in human evolution. While global studies highlight its structural complexity and association with starch-rich diets, localized selection patterns remain underexplored. Here, we analyze AMY1 copy number in 3,723 individuals from 85 populations, revealing that Indigenous Peruvian Andean populations possess the highest AMY1 copy number globally. A genome-wide analysis shows significantly higher amylase copy numbers in Peruvian Andean genomes compared to closely related populations. Further, we identify positive selection (selection coefficient of 0.0124, log likelihood ratio of 11.1543) at the nucleotide level on a haplotype harboring at least five haploid AMY1 copies, with a Peruvian Andean-specific expansion dated to around 10,000 years ago, coinciding with potato domestication in the region. Using ultra-long-read sequencing, we demonstrate that previously described recombination-based mutational mechanisms drive the formation of high-copy AMY1 haplotypes observed in Andean population. Our study provides a framework for investigating structurally complex loci and their role in human dietary adaptation.

Chapter III

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