西方黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes verus)和人类相似的遗传多样性和连锁不平衡模式表明MHC分子进化机制高度保守。

IF 3.4 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Christelle Vangenot, José Manuel Nunes, Gaby M Doxiadis, Estella S Poloni, Ronald E Bontrop, Natasja G de Groot, Alicia Sanchez-Mazas
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:随着环境的变化,种群数量减少或面临新的致病威胁,许多物种面临灭绝的威胁。主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)基因遗传多样性的减少可能对种群的生存产生巨大影响,因为这些基因在适应性免疫中起着关键作用。黑猩猩可能就是这种情况,它们的MHC基因揭示了一种古老的选择性清除的特征,这种清除可能是由于几百万年前一种病毒的流行减少了它们的种群规模。为了更好地评估这一过去的事件是如何影响黑猩猩与人类的MHC变异的,我们分析了四个黑猩猩队列中七个MHC基因的遗传多样性和连锁不平衡的几个指标,并将它们与大量人类群体中对同源HLA基因的估计进行了比较。结果:有趣的是,分析揭示了黑猩猩和人类七种MHC基因的分子多样性和连锁不平衡的相似模式。结果表明,A、B、C和DRB1位点等位基因丰富度和杂合度最高,DRB1、DQA1和DQB1位点核苷酸多样性最高,DQA1 ~ DQB1、DQA1 ~ DRB1、DQB1 ~ DRB1和B ~ C位点均存在显著的连锁不平衡和连锁不平衡单倍型比例最高。我们的研究结果还表明,尽管基因座之间存在一些差异,但在当代黑猩猩中观察到的遗传多样性和连锁不平衡水平在全球范围内与在小型孤立人类种群中估计的水平相似,而与大型种群相比存在显著差异。结论:首先,我们得出结论,高度保守的机制塑造了黑猩猩和人类同源MHC基因的多样性。此外,我们的研究结果支持了一种假设,即影响黑猩猩种群的古老人口数量下降——比如归因于病毒流行——对它们的MHC基因的分子多样性产生了实质性影响,尽管这种影响并不比人类种群中经历了快速遗传漂变的HLA基因所经历的影响更明显。因此,我们提出了一种模型,黑猩猩的MHC基因通过重组/基因转换和/或选择性扫描后的平衡选择来再生分子变异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Similar patterns of genetic diversity and linkage disequilibrium in Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) and humans indicate highly conserved mechanisms of MHC molecular evolution.

Similar patterns of genetic diversity and linkage disequilibrium in Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) and humans indicate highly conserved mechanisms of MHC molecular evolution.

Similar patterns of genetic diversity and linkage disequilibrium in Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) and humans indicate highly conserved mechanisms of MHC molecular evolution.

Similar patterns of genetic diversity and linkage disequilibrium in Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) and humans indicate highly conserved mechanisms of MHC molecular evolution.

Background: Many species are threatened with extinction as their population sizes decrease with changing environments or face novel pathogenic threats. A reduction of genetic diversity at major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes may have dramatic effects on populations' survival, as these genes play a key role in adaptive immunity. This might be the case for chimpanzees, the MHC genes of which reveal signatures of an ancient selective sweep likely due to a viral epidemic that reduced their population size a few million years ago. To better assess how this past event affected MHC variation in chimpanzees compared to humans, we analysed several indexes of genetic diversity and linkage disequilibrium across seven MHC genes on four cohorts of chimpanzees and we compared them to those estimated at orthologous HLA genes in a large set of human populations.

Results: Interestingly, the analyses uncovered similar patterns of both molecular diversity and linkage disequilibrium across the seven MHC genes in chimpanzees and humans. Indeed, in both species the greatest allelic richness and heterozygosity were found at loci A, B, C and DRB1, the greatest nucleotide diversity at loci DRB1, DQA1 and DQB1, and both significant global linkage disequilibrium and the greatest proportions of haplotypes in linkage disequilibrium were observed at pairs DQA1 ~ DQB1, DQA1 ~ DRB1, DQB1 ~ DRB1 and B ~ C. Our results also showed that, despite some differences among loci, the levels of genetic diversity and linkage disequilibrium observed in contemporary chimpanzees were globally similar to those estimated in small isolated human populations, in contrast to significant differences compared to large populations.

Conclusions: We conclude, first, that highly conserved mechanisms shaped the diversity of orthologous MHC genes in chimpanzees and humans. Furthermore, our findings support the hypothesis that an ancient demographic decline affecting the chimpanzee populations - like that ascribed to a viral epidemic - exerted a substantial effect on the molecular diversity of their MHC genes, albeit not more pronounced than that experienced by HLA genes in human populations that underwent rapid genetic drift during humans' peopling history. We thus propose a model where chimpanzees' MHC genes regenerated molecular variation through recombination/gene conversion and/or balancing selection after the selective sweep.

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来源期刊
BMC Evolutionary Biology
BMC Evolutionary Biology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: BMC Evolutionary Biology is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of molecular and non-molecular evolution of all organisms, as well as phylogenetics and palaeontology.
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