4.0 Article

Infectious Disease and the Diversification of the Human Genome

Journal

HUMAN BIOLOGY
Volume 89, Issue 1, Pages 47-65

Publisher

WAYNE STATE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.13110/humanbiology.89.1.03

Keywords

INFECTIOUS DISEASE; IMMUNITY; HUMAN GENOME; EVOLUTIONARY IMMUNOLOGY; PATHOGEN-HOST CONFLICT; IMMUNE PLEIOTROPY; IMMUNE PROMISCUITY; IMMUNE SYSTEM REDUNDANCY

Funding

  1. Wenner Gren Foundation [8702]

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The human immune system is under great pathogen-mediated selective pressure. Divergent infectious disease pathogenesis across human populations combined with the overrepresentation of immune genes in genomic regions with signatures of positive selection suggests that pathogens have significantly altered the human genome. However, important features of the human immune system can confound searches for and interpretations of signatures of pathogen-mediated evolution. Immune system redundancy, immune gene pleiotropy, host ability to acquire immunity and alter the immune repertoire of offfspring through priming, and host microbiome complicate evolutionary interpretations of host-pathogen interactions. The overall promiscuity and sensitivity of the immune system to local environments can also muddy assumptions about the origins of a selective pressure on a given set of genes. This review addresses (a) how features of the immune system, the primary bufffer between a pathogen and the human genome, afffect evolutionary signal and (b) the considerations that must be made when assessing how pathogens have contributed to human diversification.

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