Evolutionary Selection and Constraint on Human Knee Chondrocyte Regulation Impacts Osteoarthritis Risk

Daniel Richard, Zun Liu, Jiaxue Cao, Ata M Kiapour, Jessica Willen, Siddharth Yarlagadda, Evelyn Jagoda, Vijaya B Kolachalama, Jakob T Sieker, Gary H Chang, Pushpanathan Muthuirulan, Mariel Young, Anand Masson, Johannes Konrad, Shayan Hosseinzadeh, David E Maridas, Vicki Rosen, Roman Krawetz, Neil Roach, Terence D Capellini.
Cell. 2020-04-16;181(2):362-381.
Abstract
During human evolution, the knee adapted to the biomechanical demands of bipedalism by altering chondrocyte developmental programs. This adaptive process was likely not without deleterious consequences to health. Today, osteoarthritis occurs in 250 million people, with risk variants enriched in non-coding sequences near chondrocyte genes, loci that likely became optimized during knee evolution. We explore this relationship by epigenetically profiling joint chondrocytes, revealing ancient selection and recent constraint and drift on knee regulatory elements, which also overlap osteoarthritis variants that contribute to disease heritability by tending to modify constrained functional sequence. We propose a model whereby genetic violations to regulatory constraint, tolerated during knee development, lead to adult pathology. In support, we discover a causal enhancer variant (rs6060369) present in billions of people at a risk locus (GDF5-UQCC1), showing how it impacts mouse knee-shape and osteoarthritis. Overall, our methods link an evolutionarily novel aspect of human anatomy to its pathogenesis.
Consortium data used in this publication
GSE122877