Nature 460, 388-391 (16 July 2009) | doi:10.1038/nature08149;    Received 4 March 2009;    Accepted 15 May 2009;    Published online 24 June 2009
The ecology, behaviour and genetics of our closest living relatives, the  nonhuman primates, should help us to understand the evolution of our  own lineage. Although a large amount of data has been amassed on primate  ecology and behaviour, much less is known about the functional and  evolutionary genetic aspects of primate biology, especially in wild  primates. As a result, even in well-studied populations in which  nongenetic factors that influence adaptively important characteristics  have been identified, we have almost no understanding of the underlying  genetic basis for such traits. Here, we report on the functional  consequences of genetic variation at the malaria-related FY (DARC) gene in a well-studied population of yellow baboons (Papio cynocephalus) living in Amboseli National Park in Kenya. FY  codes for a chemokine receptor normally expressed on the erythrocyte  surface that is the known entry point for the malarial parasite Plasmodium vivax 1, 2, 3. We identified variation in the cis-regulatory region of the baboon FY gene that was associated with phenotypic variation in susceptibility to Hepatocystis, a malaria-like pathogen that is common in baboons4, 5. Genetic variation in this region also influenced gene expression in vivo in wild individuals, a result we confirmed using in vitro  reporter gene assays. The patterns of genetic variation in and around  this locus were also suggestive of non-neutral evolution, raising the  possibility that the evolution of the FY cis-regulatory region in baboons has exhibited both mechanistic and selective parallels with the homologous region in humans6, 7, 8.  Together, our results represent the first reported association and  functional characterization linking genetic variation and a complex  trait in a natural population of nonhuman primates.
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