SLC24A5, a Putative Cation Exchanger, Affects Pigmentation in Zebrafish and Humans

Rebecca L. Lamason(Pennsylvania State University), Manzoor-Ali P.K. Mohideen(Pennsylvania State University), Jason R. Mest(Pennsylvania State University), Andrew C. Wong(Pennsylvania State University), Heather Norton(Pennsylvania State University), Michele C. Aros(Pennsylvania State University), Michael J. Jurynec(Pennsylvania State University), Xianyun Mao(Pennsylvania State University), Vanessa R. Humphreville(Pennsylvania State University), Jasper E. Humbert(Geisinger Medical Center), Soniya Sinha(Pennsylvania State University), Jessica L. Moore(Pennsylvania State University), Pudur Jagadeeswaran(University of North Texas), Wei Zhao(Pennsylvania State University), Gang Ning(Pennsylvania State University), Izabela Makałowska(Pennsylvania State University), Paul McKeigue(University College Dublin), David O’Donnell(University College Dublin), Rick A. Kittles(Pennsylvania State University), Esteban J. Parra(Pennsylvania State University), Nancy J. Mangini(Pennsylvania State University), David J. Grunwald(Pennsylvania State University), Mark D. Shriver(Pennsylvania State University), Victor A. Canfield(Pennsylvania State University), Keith C. Cheng(Pennsylvania State University)
Science
December 15, 2005
Cited by 1,063

Abstract

Lighter variations of pigmentation in humans are associated with diminished number, size, and density of melanosomes, the pigmented organelles of melanocytes. Here we show that zebrafish golden mutants share these melanosomal changes and that golden encodes a putative cation exchanger slc24a5 (nckx5) that localizes to an intracellular membrane, likely the melanosome or its precursor. The human ortholog is highly similar in sequence and functional in zebrafish. The evolutionarily conserved ancestral allele of a human coding polymorphism predominates in African and East Asian populations. In contrast, the variant allele is nearly fixed in European populations, is associated with a substantial reduction in regional heterozygosity, and correlates with lighter skin pigmentation in admixed populations, suggesting a key role for the SLC24A5 gene in human pigmentation.


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