RRC ID 68589
Author Stepanova V, Moczulska KE, Vacano GN, Kurochkin I, Ju X, Riesenberg S, Macak D, Maricic T, Dombrowski L, Schörnig M, Anastassiadis K, Baker O, Naumann R, Khrameeva E, Vanushkina A, Stekolshchikova E, Egorova A, Tkachev A, Mazzarino R, Duval N, Zubkov D, Giavalisco P, Wilkinson TG, Patterson D, Khaitovich P, Pääbo S.
Title Reduced purine biosynthesis in humans after their divergence from Neandertals.
Journal Elife
Abstract We analyze the metabolomes of humans, chimpanzees, and macaques in muscle, kidney and three different regions of the brain. Although several compounds in amino acid metabolism occur at either higher or lower concentrations in humans than in the other primates, metabolites downstream of adenylosuccinate lyase, which catalyzes two reactions in purine synthesis, occur at lower concentrations in humans. This enzyme carries an amino acid substitution that is present in all humans today but absent in Neandertals. By introducing the modern human substitution into the genomes of mice, as well as the ancestral, Neandertal-like substitution into the genomes of human cells, we show that this amino acid substitution contributes to much or all of the reduction of de novo synthesis of purines in humans.
Volume 10
Published 2021-5-4
DOI 10.7554/eLife.58741
PII 58741
PMID 33942714
PMC PMC8133780
MeSH Animals Biosynthetic Pathways / genetics* Female Gene Editing Humans Macaca / metabolism Male Metabolome / genetics* Mice Mice, Transgenic Mutation, Missense Neanderthals / metabolism* Pan troglodytes / metabolism Purines / biosynthesis* Purines / metabolism*
IF 7.08
Resource
Human and Animal Cells 409B2(HPS0076)